John Blanche
John Blanche is a British fantasy and science fiction illustrator for Games Workshop. Blanche originally became associated with Games Workshop in 1977, supplying the cover for issue 4 of their gaming publication White Dwarf, and producing the cover for the first British edition of Dungeons & Dragons. Since then, he'd remained employed with them, designing various pieces of art and model designs for the various game lines that have come and gone. He finally retired in June of 2023 after some mounting health issues, leaving the company he'd worked at for over 40 as one of its foundational pillars.
Surprisingly, John Blanche was perhaps once the single most incredibly skub thing to come out of Games Workshop, prior to Age of Sigmar. It usually seems there is no middle ground on his work; you either think he single-handedly set the art style for the golden age of Warhammer Fantasy and created the atmosphere of Warhammer 40,000, or you think he's a (rather intelligent) monkey with a penchant for red crayons.
Blanche's work is similar to that of Ian Miller, although while Blanche's style is focused on the feel of an image and an over-the-top "metal" look with lots of blended (red) colors creating a sketchy look, Miller's is focused on massive amounts of detail and sharp lines. Both are very similar in composition.
For anybody interested in his drawing process, here's a video of him doing some Age of Sigmar art and here's a video of him doing some Warhammer 40,000 art.
A number of his Warhammer Fantasy pieces appear in Vermintide 2 as paintings attributed to Marius Holseher.
Pro-Blanche[edit]
Blanche's illustrations are marked by heavy texturing to portray a used, gritty world. Other typical features are exaggerated proportions, skulls, and intricate detailing (especially implants), which all take a fair amount of skill to produce. He also has a fetish for the colour brown. Given that he admits Rembrandt is an influence on him, this is probably a reason why he likes the colour - another, recently revealed on the AoS podcast, is that he dislikes the way blue paints tend to fade over the years-long process between creating a concept sketch and producing a finished model. He is largely responsible for most of the tone of the grim, dark, grimdark future; although the universe was inspired by many sources, and many authors and artists contributed to its development, none capture it quite as well as Blanche does. Many of the coolest aspects of the universe were inspired by or directly taken from his artwork.
Anti-Blanche[edit]
Blanche's illustrations are marked by heavy texturing to portray a used, gritty world. Unfortunately, this means it's usually difficult to figure out what in the hell you're actually looking at. Other typical features are exaggerated proportions, skulls, and "intricate" detailing (although a similar effect is found on many kindergarteners' scribbles), all of which look absolutely ridiculous. He also gives every faction weird beige bio-mechanical tentacles to stand next to. Many on the pro-Blanche side believe he "set the tone" for the universe, ignoring the contribution of the dozens (even hundreds) of other sources and contributors. Other artists capture the universe in much higher detail. Many of the coolest aspects of the universe are completely unrelated to Blanche, and in fact would be much less cool if he had been involved. Blanche is also sadly obsessed with the color red, and is believed to steal red crayons from unsuspecting children.
Gallery[edit]
-
Blanche's first work for Games Workshop. What appears to be a German Elf who regrets his decision to fuck with that crow.
-
Female space cowboy, no connection to any franchise.
-
Female space vampire, no connection to any franchise.
-
The first artwork of the very first Warhammer villain, Heinrich Kemmler, with the first appearance of the Skaven.
-
Night Goblins get their character.
-
Perhaps his most famous piece, and the reason 40k looks the way it does today.
-
Sisters of Battle get the basis of their identity from this piece. Canoness Veridyan is based on this.
-
The artwork that did more to sell the original Skeleton Horde set than the models.
-
Ferrus Manus, with armor made of chitin and curtains on his ankles.
-
A pestigor, with the hard to draw bits of the armor and limbs hidden behind a cloud of flies.
-
Tech Priests apparently working in the Garden of Nurgle.