Fred Fields

Fred Fields is an American artist whose work has appeared largely in the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game from TSR.

Fred Fields
Born
NationalityAmerican
Known forFantasy art

Biography

Fred Fields was born in northern Kentucky.[1] He grew up in the small town of Burlington, Kentucky.[2] Fields wanted to be an artist since childhood: "I don't know that becoming an artist is a decision you can make... I've been drawing since before I can remember, and I started painting at age nine. I used to do all these monsters and stuff, and my mom was frankly a little concerned about it. Now that I'm making a living at it, I think mom's OK with it. My parents always encouraged me to draw and do what I wanted with it. They've always been 100% behind me." Fields attended the Central Academy of Commercial Art in Cincinnati, and moved to Chicago after graduation.[1] He worked there for about a year in advertising, producing illustrations and concept sketches for both television commercials and print ads.[1] He worked at Leo Burnett Advertising in Chicago as a storyboard comp artist.[2]

Fields continued painting on his own time, and began sending out samples of his work; Dragon magazine was among the clients those who were interested in his work. Fields painted his first cover for Dragon in 1988, for issue #142.[1] He applied to TSR's art department soon after and was hired.[1] "I went from freelancing, completely on my own, to sitting in a room with the likes of Clyde Caldwell, Brom, Tony Szczudlo, Robh Ruppel, Dana Knutson, Randy Post, and Todd Lockwood. I just sort of stopped and thought, 'Wow, I've arrived.'"[1] Fields worked on scenes from worlds such as Forgotten Realms, and even Ravenloft, saying "It was fun doing the Gothic horror stuff. In some cases, I think I took it further than other artists. I put a lot more blood in there."[1]

His work was represented in the 1996 collection The Art of TSR: Colossal Cards. Critic Joseph Szadkowski of The Washington Times singled out Fields's work "Dragon Claw" as "stunning",[3] and later named the collection as the year's "Best Trading Card Release Based on Fantasy Art".[4] Archangel Entertainment released a book of his artwork in 1999, entitled The Art of Fred Fields.[1]

In May 2010, artwork by Fields appeared as part of the "Lucid Daydreams" Exhibition at Gallery Provocateur in Chicago.[5]

Works

Fred Fields has had his art appear in various Dungeons & Dragons game books and their associated novels throughout the 1990s, as well as in other games such as Shadowrun. His artwork has appeared on numerous D&D covers, such as Greyhawk Ruins and Book of Artifacts.

Fields has illustrated cards for the Magic: The Gathering collectible card game.

gollark: So rewrite my Rust program in Rust? Interesting suggestion. I'll consider it.
gollark: Can anyone help unbug™ it? https://pastebin.com/diwDBnvA
gollark: much art. such wow.
gollark: * debug
gollark: I suspect the issue *might* be in my logic for randomly adjusting a color channel a bit, but that's basically impossible to deubg.

References

  1. Kenson, Stephen (July 1999). "ProFiles: Fred Fields". Dragon. Renton, Washington: Wizards of the Coast (#261): 112.
  2. http://fmfsdg.fineartstudioonline.com/about
  3. Szadkowski, Joseph (March 30, 1996). "Colossal items in miniature", The Washington Times, p. B4.
  4. Szadkowski, Joseph (January 11, 1997). "Jim Shooter misfires again: SERI: Second of two parts", The Washington Times, p. B4.
  5. http://www.chicagoartistsresource.org/visual-arts/node/26562
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