Jakub Różalski


Jakub Różalski, also known as Mr. Werewolf, is a Polish artist. He is best known as the illustrator of the board game Scythe and related paintings, commonly featuring mythical, fantastical beasts, robots and similar concepts. His style combines the classic art style of late 18th and early 19th century paintings with modern fantasy and science fiction concepts.

Biography

Różalski was born in Koszalin, Poland, in 1981. He graduated from the Wyższa Szkoła Sztuki Stosowanej in Poznań. He resides in Kraków.

Works

Różalski created concept art illustrations for the 2017 film. In 2018 an artbook featuring his works, titled Howling at the Moon, was published.
The 2016 board game Scythe was inspired by his art; Różalski has contributed dozens of illustrations for the game. It is the first major work in what Różalski calls the 1920+ universe, set in an alternative history universe, around the time of the Polish–Soviet War, but incorporating science fiction elements like dieselpunk or steampunk airships and mecha. The next major installment in the 1920+ series is the Iron Harvest real-time strategy video game, in development by King Art Games, announced in 2016. The game had a successful crowdfunding phase in 2018 and is planned for release in Sptember of 2020.

Influence

In 2017 a short film by Neill Blomkamp, based on Różalski's works and showing an alternate 15th century era around the time of the Battle of Grunwald, was announced. In 2018, a Polish science-fiction short story anthology, inspired by his art, titled Inne światy Jakuba Różalskiego was published. Writers who published stories in the anthology were Sylwia Chutnik, Jacek Dukaj,, Anna Kańtoch,, Remigiusz Mróz, Łukasz Orbitowski, Robert J. Szmidt,, and Jakub Żulczyk.

Artistic style

Różalski's style combines the classic art style of painters like Ivan Shishkin, Isaac Levitan, Józef Brandt, Aleksander Gierymski, and Józef Chełmoński, whom he cites as highly influential on his style, with modern fantasy and science fiction concepts.

Recognition

Since 2018 his works have been part of the permanent exhibition in the Museum of Magical Realism "Ochorowiczówka" in Wisła, Poland. That same year, Różalski received the in the field of "digital culture".