Fantasy’s Visionaries: Artists Who Also Wrote Worlds

Throughout the history of imaginative art, a rare few creators have bridged two realms — the written word and the painted image. These are the fantasy polymaths: illustrators, painters, sculptors, and writers whose visions did not confine themselves to a single medium. Their brushstrokes and prose alike conjured worlds of wonder, terror, and mystery. Below are eight such figures whose legacy continues to define fantasy’s visual and literary aesthetics.

1. William Blake (1757–1827)

Why He’s Significant:
William Blake is often considered the founding visionary of Romantic fantasy art and poetry. His illuminated books — combining verse, mythic narrative, and engravings — redefined what a “book” could be. Works like The Marriage of Heaven and Hell and The Book of Urizen form a complex mythology blending Christian mysticism, pagan symbolism, and personal revelation.

As an Artist:
Blake’s engravings, such as The Ancient of Days and Newton, depict cosmic struggles and divine creation with a haunting, otherworldly energy. His art established a visual language of the fantastical centuries before the genre was formally named.

As a Writer:
His poetry is visionary — prophetic rather than descriptive — giving rise to archetypes later echoed in modern fantasy and graphic novels. Blake’s influence runs from Tolkien’s mythopoeia to Alan Moore’s Promethea.


2. Mervyn Peake (1911–1968)

Why He’s Significant:
Best known for The Gormenghast Trilogy, Mervyn Peake stands at the crossroads of gothic literature, surrealism, and fantasy. His combination of grotesque humor and psychological realism set him apart from Tolkien’s high myth.

As an Artist:
Peake trained at the Royal Academy and was an accomplished illustrator, producing stark ink drawings for Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Treasure Island. His art is meticulous, distorted, and macabre — an echo of his written worlds.

As a Writer:
In Titus Groan and Gormenghast, Peake created a labyrinthine world of ritual and decay. His prose has often been described as “painterly,” rich in visual texture and architectural precision. The novels’ atmosphere of crumbling grandeur mirrors the twisted elegance of his drawings.


3. Sidney Sime (1867–1941)

Why He’s Significant:
Sidney Sime’s darkly whimsical illustrations brought to life the early 20th century’s most imaginative fantasy literature, particularly the works of Lord Dunsany — a key influence on Lovecraft and Tolkien.

As an Artist:
His pen-and-ink landscapes of impossible architecture, grotesque figures, and dreamlike ruins created the visual foundation for modern fantasy illustration. His art was both satirical and otherworldly.

As a Writer:
Though less famous for his own writing, Sime published short fantasy tales and allegories that shared his artistic tone — cynical, mystical, and strange. His illustrated books reveal a singular mind capable of fusing image and story seamlessly.


4. Clark Ashton Smith (1893–1961)

Why He’s Significant:
A true Renaissance man of the macabre, Smith excelled in sculpture, poetry, painting, and prose. A member of the Lovecraft Circle, his writing expanded the boundaries of weird fantasy and cosmic horror.

As an Artist:
Smith’s sculptures and paintings depict alien gods, dying worlds, and forbidden sorceries. His tactile art often mirrored the decay and sensuality of his fiction.

As a Writer:
His fictional cycles — Zothique, Hyperborea, and Averoigne — are baroque masterpieces of decadent fantasy. His ornate style, dripping with archaic words and opulent imagery, evokes a painter’s brush.
Smith’s visual imagination and linguistic craftsmanship were one and the same — each a mirror of the other.


5. Hannes Bok (1914–1964)

Why He’s Significant:
One of the great illustrators of mid-century fantasy and science fiction, Bok also wrote imaginative novels that fused his visual flamboyance with mythic storytelling.

As an Artist:
Bok’s distinctive palette and dreamlike geometry transformed pulp magazine covers into luminous gateways to other worlds. His art blended the mysticism of Maxfield Parrish with the occult symbolism of Blake.

As a Writer:
In The Sorcerer’s Ship and Beyond the Golden Stair, Bok’s prose captures the same sense of luminous wonder found in his paintings — filled with mythic quests, metaphysical musings, and moral allegory.


6. Virgil Finlay (1914–1971)

Why He’s Significant:
Finlay was perhaps the most technically skilled fantasy illustrator of the pulp era, celebrated for his meticulous stippling and surreal dreamscapes. He also contributed his own speculative fiction to the same magazines that printed his art.

As an Artist:
His work appeared in Weird Tales, Fantastic Adventures, and Amazing Stories, elevating pulp illustration to fine art through intricate detail and psychological depth.

As a Writer:
Though less prolific as an author, Finlay’s short stories share the same visual vividness as his art — rich in atmosphere, mystery, and cosmic dread. His dual talent helped define the visual identity of American fantasy pulp culture.


7. J. Allen St. John (1872–1957)

Why He’s Significant:
St. John’s dynamic art established the heroic visual template for 20th-century fantasy and adventure, especially through his work with Edgar Rice Burroughs.

As an Artist:
His illustrations for Tarzan and John Carter of Mars are iconic — muscular, romantic, and bursting with energy. His influence echoes in Frank Frazetta and the entire sword-and-sorcery aesthetic.

As a Writer:
Beyond illustration, St. John penned stories and essays on art and heroism, articulating a philosophy of imagination rooted in chivalry and myth. He viewed fantasy art as moral storytelling in visual form.


8. Pauline Baynes (1922–2008)

Why She’s Significant:
Baynes was the quiet visionary behind the familiar faces of Narnia and Middle-earth. She remains one of the few fantasy illustrators whose art is inseparable from the text itself.

As an Artist:
Her clean lines and medieval-inspired ornamentation brought a timeless quality to C. S. Lewis’s Chronicles of Narnia and Tolkien’s Farmer Giles of Ham.

As a Writer:
Baynes also wrote and illustrated her own stories, including How Dog Began and The Song of the Three Holy Children. Her work fuses the gentle mythic tone of English folklore with a deep moral simplicity.


9. Charles Moffat (1979–Present)

Why He’s Significant:
Moffat's stylized political and feminist art defined the post-September 11th era, and established himself as an artist who valued meaning and social commentary, while simultaneously creating a volume of work that dealt with fantasy, gothic culture, and counter-culture.

As an Artist:
His iconic painting American Censorship would later be used as the template for a Time Magazine cover, appeared in a hip hop video, and documentaries about censorship in the USA. He is one of a relatively few living artists who have their paintings routinely taught in university art history programs. Many of his other paintings have similarly appeared in film, television and books.

As a Writer:
Despite his paintings talents and fame, Charles Moffat is more often known for his book series TAOW (The Adventures of Wrathgar), a heroic fantasy series that blends Sword and Sorcery with other subgenres of fantasy. His nonfiction works have also appeared in art history journals, major art history websites, and magazines. He paints and illustrates his own book covers.


Legacy

These artist-authors were not mere illustrators of imagination — they embodied it. Their works demonstrate that fantasy is not confined to genre or medium. 

From Blake’s visionary prophecies to Peake’s architectural prose, Smith’s necromantic decadence to Baynes’s luminous fables, each merged the verbal and visual into a single act of creation.
Their legacy persists in modern fantasy art, concept design, and literature — reminding us that the imagination speaks many tongues, but paints with the same hand.


Looking for fantasy books by indie authors? ArcaneTomes.org has a long list of Romantasy books, dark fantasy books, epic fantasy books, and LGBTQ fantasy books.

The Polymaths: Artists and Authors

Outside of fantasy art, certain artistic movements and eras practically bred polymaths: individuals who created both visual and literary works of lasting influence. Below is a breakdown by genre or art movement, focusing on where the overlap between artist and author was most culturally significant.


1. Romanticism (late 18th – mid-19th century)

Why it produced polymaths:
Romanticism celebrated emotion, imagination, and individual genius — ideals that naturally encouraged artists to express themselves across multiple forms.

Notable polymaths:

  • William Blake – Poet, painter, engraver, visionary (still fits here beyond fantasy).

  • Johann Wolfgang von Goethe – Novelist (Faust), poet, playwright, and scientific illustrator.

  • John Ruskin – Art critic, watercolorist, and philosopher of aesthetics.

  • Eugène Delacroix – Painter who kept extensive literary journals exploring color theory and philosophy.

Significance:
Romanticism blurred the line between writing and painting — both were seen as vehicles for soul expression.


2. Symbolism (late 19th century)

Why it produced polymaths:
Symbolism viewed art as a means of spiritual or psychological revelation. Artists sought to express hidden truths through both words and images.

Notable polymaths:

  • Gustave Moreau – Painter and essayist on myth and the unconscious.

  • Odilon Redon – Illustrator and writer whose dreamlike lithographs paralleled his symbolist prose.

  • Aubrey Beardsley – Illustrator, designer, and decadent writer (connected to Wilde’s circle).

  • Jean Delville – Painter, poet, and occult philosopher.

Significance:
The Symbolists made art and literature interdependent, laying foundations for Surrealism and fantasy art alike.


3. The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood (mid–late 19th century, England)

Why it produced polymaths:
The Pre-Raphaelites aimed to unite poetry, painting, and medieval ideals. Many wrote verse as meticulously as they painted.

Notable polymaths:

  • Dante Gabriel Rossetti – Painter and poet (The Blessed Damozel).

  • William Morris – Designer, illustrator, poet, novelist, and founder of the Arts and Crafts movement.

  • Edward Burne-Jones – Painter who collaborated with Morris and illustrated literary works.

Significance:
Their holistic approach treated beauty itself as a moral and intellectual pursuit — every medium part of a single aesthetic philosophy.


4. The Renaissance (15th–16th centuries)

Why it produced polymaths:
The Renaissance ideal was literally the “universal man” (uomo universale) — mastery across arts and sciences was the measure of genius.

Notable polymaths:

  • Leonardo da Vinci – Painter, anatomist, engineer, writer of treatises and notebooks on every subject imaginable.

  • Michelangelo Buonarroti – Sculptor, painter, poet (The Sonnets of Michelangelo).

  • Albrecht Dürer – Printmaker, mathematician, and author of major works on perspective and human proportion.

Significance:
Renaissance polymaths treated art and writing as extensions of rational curiosity and divine geometry. Both were ways to understand God, man, and nature.


5. Surrealism (early–mid 20th century)

Why it produced polymaths:
Surrealism demanded that artists explore the unconscious through any expressive means. Its members freely moved between poetry, painting, and film.

Notable polymaths:

  • André Breton – Poet, art theorist, and visual artist; founder of the movement.

  • Salvador Dalí – Painter, filmmaker, and prolific author of manifestos and autobiographical fiction.

  • Max Ernst – Painter, sculptor, and writer of surrealist novels (Une Semaine de Bonté).

  • Leonora Carrington – Painter and novelist whose surreal imagery and mythic prose mirror each other.

Significance:
In Surrealism, the boundary between painting and writing vanished — both were dream documentation.


6. Modernism (early 20th century)

Why it produced polymaths:
Modernism valued experimentation and cross-disciplinary innovation. Many modernists used both word and image to break conventions.

Notable polymaths:

  • Jean Cocteau – Poet, filmmaker, novelist, and visual artist.

  • Wyndham Lewis – Painter and author of Tarr and The Apes of God.

  • Gertrude Stein – Writer and patron who painted with words, influencing cubist aesthetics.

  • Marcel Duchamp – Conceptual artist and occasional writer of philosophical essays and notes.

Significance:
Modernism united art and literature under the banner of form over realism — all creation was experiment.


7. The Arts and Crafts / Aesthetic Movement (late 19th century)

Why it produced polymaths:
This movement saw no hierarchy between art, craft, and writing. Beauty was to be lived and written equally.

Notable polymaths:

  • William Morris – Again central here for his synthesis of design, poetry, and prose (News from Nowhere).

  • Oscar Wilde – Though primarily a writer, he engaged heavily with aesthetic theory and design principles.

  • Walter Crane – Illustrator and children’s author who wrote extensively on art and education.

Significance:
Their approach blurred “fine art” and “applied art,” and their writing was often a manifesto of visual ideals.


8. The Bauhaus (1919–1933)

Why it produced polymaths:
The Bauhaus aimed to unify all arts, merging visual design, architecture, and theoretical writing.

Notable polymaths:

  • Paul Klee – Painter and theorist whose notebooks on color and form are modern classics.

  • Wassily Kandinsky – Abstract painter and author of Concerning the Spiritual in Art.

  • László Moholy-Nagy – Painter, photographer, and prolific writer on design and light.

Significance:
For Bauhaus artists, writing was not an afterthought — it was the intellectual architecture behind their visual work.


Summary

If fantasy birthed its artist-authors through imagination and worldbuilding, then these other movements birthed them through philosophy, spirituality, and aesthetic revolution.

  • Renaissance: Sought divine truth through mastery.

  • Romanticism: Expressed emotion and genius through both brush and pen.

  • Pre-Raphaelitism & Symbolism: Married image and verse in pursuit of beauty and mystery.

  • Surrealism & Modernism: Destroyed the wall between word and image entirely.

  • Bauhaus: Systematized the relationship between art and theory.