The Other Red Box - Early Alternative Art For D&D

A bit of D&D history! Frank Mentzer (TSR, Dungeons & Dragons, creator of the RPGA) shared the following anecdote regarding an alternate cover for D&D's Red Box set which never came to be. The art was by Larry Elmore and featured more than the single fighter and dragon we're familiar with. The art is actually for sale you would need to contact Frank directly via Facebook or email if you're interested.

A bit of D&D history! Frank Mentzer (TSR, Dungeons & Dragons, creator of the RPGA) shared the following anecdote regarding an alternate cover for D&D's Red Box set which never came to be. The art was by Larry Elmore and featured more than the single fighter and dragon we're familiar with. The art is actually for sale you would need to contact Frank directly via Facebook or email if you're interested.


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"Once upon a time, the TSR folks decided in the early 1980s that the D&D Game had gotten SO big that it could be sold in mass-market retail stores and book stores.

That meant a lot of changes. Tom Moldvay's great new Basic set had only been out 2 years but had to have new artworks at least, probably a whole new edition, to match the slick quality necessary for mass merchandising. (That applied to the brand-new Cook-Marsh Expert as well.) I was tasked to write the text, and Larry Elmore was selected as the principal artist, to do covers and many interior artworks.

Initial cover concepts were similar to the previous edition, portraying a group of adventurers with a dragon. That was almost used, but it bothered Gary. After the color images were ready to be finalized in oils, after a lot of plans were made, Gary changed course. He asked Larry to focus the action on just one fighter and one dragon... and the world-famous Red Box cover emerged.Recently I was digging through a container of old, long-forgotten artworks, and came across Larry's original, the "Other Red Box" cover. We put it on display for Frankenparty (just before GaryCon IX), and it's been in the living room ever since.

Thought you might like to see it. (Thanx to Jon Peterson for the quality photo.)

Special note: This original Elmore, a historical milestone and monument to 'what might have been', is for sale. It's quite expensive and I do have a pending offer. If you want to get into the fray, pls let me know via pm or email. (The sale should be finalized by 01 July, so you have time.)"





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jonesy

A Wicked Kendragon
In the published picture the dragon looks far more imposing because the picture is zoomed right in to it. They could have used this picture on the inside cover, though.
 

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darjr

I crit!
Garbage? Read the article again.

It's not in the article. When Frank Mentzer originaly rescued that beautiful art from TSR he rescued it from their garbage.

Quote from Facebook.
Historical note: You can see the damage on the right side, which (thank goodness!) does not materially affect the Work. This artifact was discarded by TSR but rescued; the damage is of the period, c. 1984.

Good news everyone! Frank Mentzer posted that he and Larry Elmore talked and they'll make it available as a print!
 

Lylandra

Adventurer
I like it more than the original one. To me, D&D always was about a party of heroes doing great deeds. Cooperating to to stuff that each of them couldn't do on their own.
 




jedijon

Explorer
What is the dragon looking at? That is so creepy that he's just glazed over while the fighter takes a swing.

Art of this aesthetic is always a turn-off. It looks amazingly like 17th century religious illuminations. Enh. So we'll give it the nostalgia nod.
 

jonesy

A Wicked Kendragon
What is the dragon looking at? That is so creepy that he's just glazed over while the fighter takes a swing.
Maybe it's casting a spell? Something not targeted at the party? Trying to buff itself? Or it just realized it left the oven on.
 

Saxon1974

Explorer
Man I love Elmore. No one's art invokes as much wonder for me as his does. It's the main thing that got me to buy the box when I was a kid.

The dragon is looking at the wizard of course as he knows she is about to unleash magical hell on him.

I don't know if I like this better than the original, I would need to see the finished and polished version done side by side. That being said I wouldn't change anything; time the Elmore/Easley/Parkinson/Caldwell is the best d&d art.
 

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