Magali Villeneuve

Magali Villeneuve (born 1981) is a French illustrator, freelance fantasy artist, and fantasy author.[1][2] Her art has been used for official games and products set in many large fantasy universes and franchises, including Magic: The Gathering, A Song of Ice and Fire, Star Wars, Warhammer, The Lord of the Rings, and Call of Cthulhu.[3][4][5]

Magali Villeneuve
Born1981
OccupationArtist

Early life, education, and family

Villeneuve was born in Bordeaux, France in 1980. She did not attend school to be an artist; instead, she is completely self-taught. Today, she lives in Bruyères with her husband.[6]

Career

Villeneuve began illustrating professionally in 2006. As she did not receive any formal artistic training, her first commissions were for book covers from small publishers.[7] After reading Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time series, her "goals changed": she abandoned her ambition to work as a Disney animator in favor of fantasy illustrations. Discovering one day in a library that Fantasy Flight Games published a book of A Song of Ice and Fire illustrations, she sent her portfolio to the company, netting her her first commission from the American game company.[1] From this partnership, she worked on illustrations for a number of different trading card games, board games, and role-playing games set in several different fantasy worlds.[8]

In 2012, after several years of experience illustrating card games for Fantasy Flight Games, Villeneuve began contributing illustrations to Wizards of the Coast for Magic: The Gathering cards.[9] She has since gone on to work with several other publishing and video game companies, including Cygames, Random House, Del Rey, and Titan Publishing Group, for which she produced illustrations for Star Wars.[8]

Although she originally painted her pieces, such as her book covers, Villeneuve has since transitioned to work completely digitally, stating that she "couldn't make it without a digital technique."[10]

Villeneuve is also the author of La Dernière Terre ("Line of Descent"), a series of dark fantasy books.[8][11]

gollark: Anyway, we've actually stopped executing phases now. It was unnecessary.
gollark: Olivia posts non-bird things. I need just birds.
gollark: Can you give me a list? I would like some sort of automatic bird aggregator.
gollark: Since modern ML has a full human-level grasp of language and subcultures and such, it is entirely reasonable. And there are no ethical issues.
gollark: Good.

References

  1. "How Painting 'A Game of Thrones' Taught an Artist to Love the Lannisters". Inverse. Inverse Entertainment. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  2. "Artist Interview: Magali Villeneuve". Art of MTG. MTG Art. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  3. "The Artists of Magic: Magali Villeneuve". magic.wizards.com. Wizards of the Coast LLC. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  4. "The French Illustrator of Game of Thrones". Le Parisien. Le Parisien. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  5. "Star Wars: Empire and Rebellion – Razor's Edge and the Perfectly Imperfect Princess". StarWars.com. Lucasfilm Ltd. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  6. "Magic Magali!". L'Est Républicain. L'Est Républicain. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  7. "Magali Villeneuve: Illustrator of the Imaginary". GentleGeek. GentleGeek. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  8. "About". MagaliVilleneuve.com. WordPress. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  9. "Comment illustre-t-on une carte Magic? On a posé la question (et d'autres) à la talentueuse illustratrice Magali Villeneuve". Le Journal du Geek. Just Digital Media Group. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  10. "Official A Song of Ice and Fire illustrator on why she likes painting the Lannisters best". WinterIsComing.net. FanSided Inc. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  11. "Here's how "Game of Thrones" Characters Compare in the Books vs. the Show". Photo Vide. Photo Vide. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
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