The people have spoken, which means I shall continue this series for a while longer. In reviewing the suggestions offered by readers, one of the more popular ones was the mind flayer. Since this tentacled monstrosity is also my favorite Dungeons & Dragons monster, I thought it'd make sense to kick off the next round of these posts with a look at mind flayers (or illithids, as they were called in Descent into the Depths of the Earth).
Though the mind flayer first appears in issue #1 of The Strategic Review (Spring 1975), the first illustration of it does not appear until a year later, in Supplement III, Eldritch Wizardry (1976), as drawn by Tracy Lesch. Despite how early it is, this is clearly recognizable as the monster of later depictions – a rare instance when someone other than Dave Sutherland laid the esthetic foundations upon which later artists would build.
Speaking of Dave Sutherland, here's his take on the mind flayer from the
Monster Manual (1977). You can see that he was riffing off Lesch's original conception, right down to having four facial tentacles and a preference for high-collared robes of the sort favored by Ming the Merciless.
Like the kobold, the mind flayer gets two illustrations in the Monster Manual. However, this second illustration is not by Sutherland but rather by Tom Wham. Though humorous in tone, Wham's art shows a mind flayer that looks very close to its predecessors. He even includes the skull on the monster's belt. (Also of interest is that one of the illithid's victims is a halfling.)
The aforementioned Descent into the Depths of the Earth (1978) not only gives us the name illithid but also this terrific illustration (by an uncredited artist that I nevertheless think is Dave Trampier). Again, note the similarities to its predecessors.
1980 gave us several different illustrations of mind flayers, starting with this one from
The Rogues Gallery by Erol Otus:
We get another, from Jeff Dee this time, in
Expedition to the Barrier Peaks. It's
one of my favorites of all time, probably because
it's different. Rather than showing the illithid in a high-collared robe like every previous artist, Dee puts him in a sci-fi uniform, wielding technological devices – and it
feel right. I can't be certain, but I suspect this illustration is the origin of the widely held notion that mind flayer are from
another world (or even the future).
1980 also brought us the first mind flayer miniature from Grenadier Models. By most standards, it's pretty goofy looking, but you can see, if you look carefully, that it's heavily inspired by Sutherland's Monster Manual illustration. For example, the mini has similar sleeve decoration and he's wearing the same strange harness seen in the MM.
The next year, in 1981,
AD&D modules D1 and
D2 were combined together under a single cover, with the addition of some new art. One of those pieces of art appeared on the back cover of the module. Drawn by Bill Willingham, this is the first time we've seen a mind flayer
in color.
In October 1983, in issue #78 of Dragon, Roger E. Moore's "The Ecology of the Mind Flayer" appeared, accompanied by a Roger Raupp illustration. What's notable about this illustration is that the illithid is not wearing a high-collared robe, but he is wearing that harness seen in previous illustration.
Citadel Miniatures briefly held the license for AD&D miniatures and produced several mind flayers in 1985, such as the one below. The high-collared robe returns once more.
By 1987, the license passed to Ral Partha. The company held the license for almost a decade and, during that time, they produced this mind flayer miniature:
I don't know precisely when this mini was produced, so, if anyone knows, please let me know in the comments. This is important for a reason that will become apparent shortly.
For the 1989 Second Edition
Monstrous Compendium, we get an illustration from James Holloway. Though some of the details are different – notice the brain you can see inside the mind flayer's head – but it's still not far from what we've seen many times before, including the high-collared robe.
Finally, there's 1993's
Monstrous Manual whose depiction was done by Tony DiTerlizzi.
The illustration looks just like the Ral Partha mini above – unless it's the other way around. That's why I'm curious about when the miniature was released. My suspicion is that the DiTerlizzi illustration came first, but I cannot prove it.
With that, we come to the end of my brief look at mind flayer artwork from the TSR era of
Dungeons & Dragons. I know I've probably overlooked a lot of illithid illustrations from Second Edition, like the one on the cover of
Spelljammer, but I've already presented enough, I think, to give a good sense of how these monsters were presented during the first two decades of
D&D. However, if you can recall any illustrations of mind flayers you think are especially worthy of comment, let me know.
I really love this comparison series. I haven't seen that Raupp illustration in many, many years. His stuff just pulls me back to the Electrum Age when I had my 1 year subscription to Dragon. It's interesting that he's given it more alien/canine-type legs.
ReplyDeleteI'm not as familiar as the rest of you (I think) with D&D-original monsters, but _of course_ I know about mind flayers, they're the bee's knees. But until today I'd never seen one wearing a mitre or shako or whatever that headpiece is! That's the queen-bee's knees. The final miniature, the one you were asking for info about, is pretty great -- to me, it captures a real sense of anger, menace, or plain old threat display.
ReplyDeleteLoving this series of posts -- thanks!
Dungeon Magazine #24 had a cool vision of a Mindflayer and do not forget the Illithiad for 2e.
ReplyDeletehttps://forgottenrealms.fandom.com/wiki/The_Illithiad
The Illithiad supports the mind flayer adventure trilogy: A Darkness Gathering, Masters of Eternal Night, and Dawn of the Overmind
According to DiTerlizzi's blog, Ral Partha based the mini on his illustration: https://diterlizzi.com/behind-the-monstrous-manual-part-6/
ReplyDeleteConfirmed by the fact that the RP mini doesn't appear in catalogs until 1996, so it was sculpted sometime in 1995 or early 96. Can't recall exactly when we got the new catalogs every year back in the day.
DeleteRal Partha had two officially licensed minis for these things in their AD&D line, the first of which was sold as code 11-406 mind flayer, sculpted by Tom Meier and can be seen here:
ReplyDeletehttps://miniatures-workshop.com/lostminiswiki/index.php?title=File:Rp-11-406.jpg
The second was sold as code 11-505 illithid, sculpted by Geoff Valley, and is the one you have an image of here. As you can see, they're very different minis, with the first cleaving much closer to the Sutherland MM illustration (and greatly improved over the Grenadier attempt at the same subject).
FWIW, the illithid sculpt doesn't appear in Ral Partha's catalogs until 1996, so it's safe to say it was sculpted using DiTerlizzi's artwork as a guide.
They also imported Citadel's 31-010 "mindslayer" or "brain slayer" mini, part of their Fiend Factory range:
https://miniatures-workshop.com/lostminiswiki/index.php?title=File:RP-FF87.jpg
There might have been others from RP, but if so they're eluding a casual search. As always, I recommend the Lost Minis wiki for delving into miniatures of the past.
FWIW, I always though the Holloway Mind Flayer's exposed brain was meant to be an anatomical diagram cutaway. You can see the brain, sure, but there's also a section of muscle or meninges partly covering it, and then the surface level skin. If he wasn't trying for that effect he managed it by accident - and doesn't it look like the similar species art in Star Frontiers? I believe that was his work as well.
ReplyDeleteMoore's 1983 Dragon art is, I think, the only example of a mind flayer with digitigrade legs. Given revelations about their reproductive cycle I prefer to think that anomaly was the result of infecting a host that started out that way rather than a feature of normal mind flayer anatomy.
ReplyDeleteAlso interesting to not that with a couple of exceptions, illithids have been consistently shown to have four digits on their hands and feet. Most of their preferred hosts have five digits, which suggests the extras "drop off" as the host body is restructured.
There is a cafe near the stadium in Madrid dedicated to classic-style matador(s) and bullfighting, with the further theme in this spot that the bull wins. Some of the pictures are fairly grotesque going back to the 1930's. When we visited that cafe in 1999, I was reminded immediately of the Mind Flayer Attack illustration from Descent. Adventuring life is dangerous. I never saw the #78 Dragon illustration until just now - killer by pun - and I admire that it presents a more loathsome, gritty, and murderous illithid than the stately and majestic posture of most illustrations. Awesome. Gives me kind of a githyanki tingle. Last but not least I have always laughed at the female mind flayer illustration: Honey, I have a headache!
ReplyDeleteWhat a tremendous series. Evocative.
It's interesting to compare the mouth tentacles physiologies across the versions. Some portray them as though you're looking into the underside of an octopus (or quadropus in this case). Some portray them as one half (a semicircle) of a full octopus and almost like an exotic double-handlebar moustache. Some are a blend of both.
ReplyDeleteThat's a really good observation! Now that you've pointed it out, it really stands out. The last illustration (Orthodox priest illithid) has really octopodal anatomy (even a little beak!), while the first one looks almost like some really, really impressive mustache braiding over what might be a regular kind of mouth & jaw.
DeleteI return to this website...
ReplyDeletehttps://monsterbrains.blogspot.com/2013/01/advanced-dungeons-and-dragons-picture_27.html?m=0
First color Mind Flayer is here...
Looks like the stickers were released the same year as the module, but I'm glad you reminded me of their existence.
DeleteRegarding mind flayers being alien in origin, they have a very strong resemblance to the Scylredi from the Kane novel Darkness Weaves by Karl Edward Wagner, which was first published in 1970 under the title Darkness Weaves with Many Shades. Though the book was the unfortunate victim of some very dubious editing by the publisher, the aforementioned blood-drinking, cephalopod humanoids of extraterrestial origin were still there and at one point sink a fleet using their broken-down spacecraft.
ReplyDeleteI still have the Grenadier miniatures "Mind Master" I bought back in high school. Here's my painted version:
ReplyDeletehttps://flic.kr/p/7wsJfo
and the Lost Minis entry:
https://www.miniatures-workshop.com/lostminiswiki/index.php?title=File:G-dlfbs-2012a.jpg