Template:Short description Template:Infobox artist Gerald Brom (born March 9, 1965), known professionally as Brom, is an American gothic fantasy artist and illustrator, known for his work in role-playing games, novels, and comics.<ref>Miller, Stanley A. III (August 4, 2002). "Gen Con offerings still magical", Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, p. E1.</ref>

Early lifeEdit

Brom was born March 9, 1965, in Albany, Georgia.<ref name="Dragon #264">Template:Cite journal</ref> As the son of a U.S. Army pilot he spent much of his early years on the move, living in other countries such as Japan and Germany (he graduated from Frankfurt American High School), and in U.S. states including Alabama and Hawaii. Brought up as a military dependent he was known by his last name only, and now signs his name as simply Brom: "I get that asked more than just about any other question. It's my real name, my last name. I got called Brom all the time as a kid, and it just stuck."<ref name="Dragon #264"/>

Brom has been drawing and painting since childhood, although he had never taken any formal art classes. "I wouldn't exactly call myself self-taught, because I've always looked at the work of other artists and emulated what I liked about it. So you can say they taught me." Brom cites the work of Frank Frazetta, N.C. Wyeth, and Norman Rockwell as influences on his style: "Okay... Rockwell isn't the kind of inspiration most people expect from me, but he just painted things so well. To me it's not so much the genre but the way it's done, and you have to admire his technique."<ref name="Dragon #264"/>

CareerEdit

At the age of 20, Brom started working full-time as a commercial illustrator. By age twenty-one, he had two national art representatives, and was doing work for such clients as Coca-Cola, IBM, CNN, and Columbia Pictures.<ref name="wizardsbio">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> TSR, Inc. hired Brom on full-time in 1989 at the age of 24.<ref name="Dragon #264"/> Brom contributed to all of TSR's game and book lines, particularly the Dark Sun setting: "I pretty much designed the look and feel of the Dark Sun campaign. I was doing paintings before they were even writing about the setting. I'd do a painting or a sketch, and the designers wrote those characters and ideas into the story. I was very involved in the development process. I've been fortunate to be involved in the development end of a lot of projects I've worked on, from role-playing games to computer games."<ref name="Dragon #264"/> According to Shannon Appelcline, Brom "contributed the unique illustrations for Dark Sun that helped to set it apart from the other TSR games with their more typical fantasy drawings".<ref name="designers">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp His paintings have been published in collectible card games such as Wizards of the Coast's Magic: The Gathering and Last Unicorn Games' Heresy: Kingdom Come.<ref name="SendaiBubble-Artists">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Brom's paintings, along with Frank Frazetta's, were used in the development of the visual look of the game series Warlords.<ref>Fawkner, Steve (September 2007). "Infinite Interactive's Puzzle Quest: Challenge of the Warlords", Game Developer 14 (8): 42.</ref>

In 1993, after four years at TSR, Brom returned to the freelance market, still specializing in the darker side of the roleplaying game, card game, and comic book genres.<ref name="Dragon #264"/> Shane Lacy Hensley came up with the idea for the game Deadlands after he saw Brom's cover to Necropolis: Atlanta from White Wolf, and got Brom to do the cover for the initial release.<ref name="designers"/>Template:Rp His artwork also appeared on book covers from authors such as Michael Moorcock, Anne McCaffrey, and Terry Brooks. Brom contributed conceptual work to computer games such as Heretic II, and several top creature houses for films such as Stan Winston Studios; he also co-created, art directed, and illustrated the Dark Age collectible card game.<ref name="Dragon #264"/> He has since worked as a movie concept artist, and created illustrations for comics (by DC, Chaos, Dark Horse) and computer games (for id Software, Blizzard, Sega and Activision). Brom has also been active with a line of Brom fetish toys from Fewture and a series of bronzes from the Franklin Mint and paintings for novels (by Michael Moorcock, Terry Brooks, R.A. Salvatore, Edgar Rice Burroughs).<ref name="wizardsbio"/>

Brom returned to TSR in 1998, doing paintings for the Alternity game, the AD&D role-playing game and its Forgotten Realms and Planescape lines, and covers for Dragon and Dungeon magazines.<ref name="Dragon #264"/> His work is included in the book Masters of Dragonlance Art.<ref>D'Ammassa, Don (January 2003). "Masters of Dragonlance Art", Chronicle 25 (1): 30.</ref> He has also returned to painting for book covers for TSR's successor Wizards of the Coast, including the covers for the War of the Spider Queen series and reprints of The Avatar Series.

ReceptionEdit

In 2014, Scott Taylor of Black Gate, named Brom as #4 in a list of The Top 10 RPG Artists of the Past 40 Years, saying "Brom is arguably one of the greatest pure fantasy talents of his generation, and he still creates works just as sublime as he did in his 1990s glory."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In 2019, Brom entered the Origins Award Hall of Fame.<ref name="hall_of_fame">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In his 2023 book Monsters, Aliens, and Holes in the Ground, RPG historian Stu Horvath reviewed the fantasy role-playing game Dark Sun and noted, "The art of fantasy illustrators Gerald Brom and Tom Baxa tie together this aesthetic-first high concept ... the art of Brom and Baxa distills and transmits the themes of the setting without players having to read a single word of the boxed set. ... Brom's paintings, many of which were composed before the details of the setting were decided, evoke an alien landscape that seems dry, harsh, and strangely sexy."<ref name=mahg>Template:Cite book</ref>


WorksEdit

Template:BLP sources section

BooksEdit

  • Brom's Little Black Book
  • Offerings
  • Darkwerks: The Art of Brom (2000)
  • The Plucker (2005)
  • Metamorphosis (2007) (beinArt) Template:ISBN
  • The Devil's Rose (2007)
  • The Child Thief (2009)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  • Krampus the Yule Lord (2012)
  • The Art of Brom (2013) (Flesk) Template:ISBN
  • Lost Gods (2016)
  • Slewfoot (2021)
  • Evil in Me (2024)

Novel coversEdit

Movies (as concept artist)Edit

Video game coversEdit

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  • Diablo IV (2023)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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Tabletop gamesEdit

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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