Originally published at
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there.
I really love The Wizard’s Lesson, and we’re really getting into the truly insane bits. Today is a full recap of everything so far. It will give people who read this only in bits to go through the whole thing up until now, as well as refresh the memories of others.
I think I’m getting even better with my stick figures, particularly when scaling them against actual objects. There are still a few things I have to learn, of course. For example, drawing clothing on a stick figure without it looking completely ridiculous is still hard. Also, drawing a tiger skin over and over with my skill level is fucking ridiculous and I can’t believe I kept that detail.
The clothing in this story is, for the most part, accurate to the
Sui Dynasty, and the same with the furnace. I get a nerd boner when I’m researching things, so of course I did it for this piece.
For reference purposes, The Wizard’s Lesson was written-or written down-by Li Fu-yen, aka P’u Sung Ling. The translations that I am using as inspiration for my own version are from
Chinese Fairy Tales & Fantasies by Moss Roberts-a book which I recommend in its entirety-and
Traditional Chinese Stories: Themes and Variations by James Hightower, from which I only read “The Wizard’s Lesson.”
Incidentally, this is my first attempt at a long-form art project. I did fine on my five page
Every Time You Flush The Toilet You Dance With Death piece, so I figured I go for something lengthier.
Related: A few pages of The Wizard’s Lesson may be appearing in an upcoming low-edition print thing for sale at
Made Fest 2014.
As always, click the pics to enbiggen them, and hit the jump for everything after the first page.
Here, in it’s So-Far-Entirety, is The Wizard’s Lesson: Book One.
OH YEAH LET'S DO THIS!