I must admit, as much as I love giant monsters, I'm only familiar with the works of 1920s horror and fantasy writer H.P. Lovecraft in a purely clinical sense, doing tons of research without really reading any of his short stories, with the slight exception of The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath...which I skimmed through. With that said, Gugs, hideous race of hairy giants from that tale, were the first Lovecraftian based characters to be done as Kaiju Portraits.
http://enshohma.deviantart.com/art/Gug- ... e-79758749
And pleased with the way that picture came, I decided to take a hand at other giant horrors from the H.P. Collection.
Hopefully some true fans of his works can share their opinions on my interpretations of his unutterable monsters...true, a lot of his creations are vague, more so then a Stephen King monster, and most of what we think is Lovecraft is also not always correct. Probably explain why Gugs were so easy to do...Kadath is in a way a self contained fantasy story, despite HPL using a lot of elements and even characters from his more famous Cthulhu Mythos.
Speaking of which, here is the most famous of his creations Cthulhu himself from the 1928 short story Call Of Cthulhu.
Now like the Gugs, I took various artists versions of the monster and tried to do an amalgam, though at the same time try to make it a recognizable Cthulhu. So I went with the stereotypic octo-headed Gargoyle image (which isn't totally accurate), but added the spiky bumps seen on some real octopi to give that dragon-look that's lacking from most versions of the character but always in HPL's descriptions. The skull-like nostrils are a more contemporary element that looked to good for me to pass up.

Now although this is the Kaiju Portrait version of the Great One (no, not JG of The Honeymooners), I couldn't resist doing my own personal Cthulhu, which resulted in this illustration to be, which I incorporated a lot of sea life elements into the design, including the holes of a coral reefs for it's stomach and again the spiky dragon-like bumps on octopi skin, along with having the tendrils be less like a real animal, thus keeping true to the 'feelers' description of the original text. I'm pretty happy with the 'Raf-Cthulhu' but feel the fatter hands in the Kaiju Portrait are much better. Should have changed that before I inked it, huh?

Less successful however is my take on the Great Water Lizard dubbed Bokrug, from the 1919 short story The Doom That Came To Sarnath. Unlike most of HPL's monsters, who were great beings on unspeakable evil or indifferent or alien cosmic things, Bokrug is practically a Daimajin-like anti hero creature from his Dream-Cycle stories, like the Gugs of Kadath.
Bokrug was the worshipped god of the strange inhabitants of Ib, who sadly were wiped out in an act of hateful genocide by the human settlers of Sarnath, which would become a mighty city afterwards. Ten centuries later however, at the height of its prime, Sarnath was beset by strange disturbances during a anniversary celebration of Ib's destruction. Some were able to flee the city, but those who remained behind disappeared in a cataclysm so grand that only rubble and smaller water lizards remained...along with the long lost idol of Bokrug, who mysteriously appeared after so long. Since then, Bokrug was the chief god of where Sarnath use to stand and the nearby city of Ilarnek.
Payback's a B1tch!
Despite the cool story, my sketch of Bokrug leaves a lot to be desired; I originally wanted a water iguana as the basis, but ended up doing a monitor lizard-like body instead. And I took a risk with the 'chine-tentacles' and devil-like horns that other artists have incorporated into their versions of the Great Water Lizard. I don't know, but it doesn't work for me...your thoughts?

-More Coming Soon-