Methodia Rascal: Difference between revisions

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(Rascal called it panoscopic)
(The Ramkins owned the picture for some time)
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In the painting, over two thousand, four hundred and ninety individual dwarfs and trolls can be identified by armour or body markings. It was composed as cycloramic or "panoscopic" (as Rascal called it) art, and the viewer should be wholly encircled by the mural to feel right in the thick of the action.
In the painting, over two thousand, four hundred and ninety individual dwarfs and trolls can be identified by armour or body markings. It was composed as cycloramic or "panoscopic" (as Rascal called it) art, and the viewer should be wholly encircled by the mural to feel right in the thick of the action.


If you cannot visit the [[Royal Art Museum]], you should at least get a copy of the - unfortunately rather sensationalist - treatise "[[Koom Valley Codex]]", which has many detailed sketches of the painting.
The painting had been in the posession of the [[Ramkin|Ramkin family]], before they gave it the the [[Royal Art Museum]]. If you cannot visit the museum, you should at least get a copy of the - unfortunately rather sensationalist - treatise "[[Koom Valley Codex]]", which has many detailed sketches of the painting.


The picture plays an important role in {{T!}} to solve the mystery of the Battle.
The picture plays an important role in {{T!}} to solve the mystery of the Battle.

Revision as of 10:32, 4 October 2013

An artist, he painted the Battle of Koom Valley, a work of art fifty feet long and ten feet high that depicted the famous battle between the Dwarfs and the Trolls. During the painting of the picture (which took several years to complete) he went insane, often thinking he was being pursued by the Chicken and occasionally thinking he was the Chicken. He choked to death on feathers just after the painting was completed, with a note underneath him that read :'Awk! Awk! It comes! IT COMES!'. He left behind many hundred notes to himself, stuffed in old chicken-feed sacks.

In the painting, over two thousand, four hundred and ninety individual dwarfs and trolls can be identified by armour or body markings. It was composed as cycloramic or "panoscopic" (as Rascal called it) art, and the viewer should be wholly encircled by the mural to feel right in the thick of the action.

The painting had been in the posession of the Ramkin family, before they gave it the the Royal Art Museum. If you cannot visit the museum, you should at least get a copy of the - unfortunately rather sensationalist - treatise "Koom Valley Codex", which has many detailed sketches of the painting.

The picture plays an important role in Thud! to solve the mystery of the Battle.