Mulefa Art on the Web!

Evmulefa-thumb-6b.giferywhere I look nowadays, I seem to see some mention of my favorite wheeled creatures, the mulefa. The mulefa (singular zalif) are sentient beings who help Mary Malone realize her destiny in the science fiction novel The Amber Spyglass by Philip Pullman. Mulefa bear some resemblance to antelopes or small elephants in our universe, but they evolved with a diamond-shaped frame rather than a spine. They travel using seed pods from indigenous trees as wheels. The outpouring of web art depicting mulefa probably stems from their otherworldly appearance. Like me, I think Pullman fans want a clearer picture of what these creatures really look like. So, to help answer this question, here’s a sampling of the mulefa art I’ve found on the Web so far.

(Top right: Mulefa graphic by EricD. Found on: http://forums.polyloop.net)

klorel03.jpg

 

Found on: http://klorel03.deviantart.com/art

Artist: klorel03

DweebMeter: 4/5 

3djinn_mulefa.jpg

 

Found on: http://3djinn.deviantart.com/art/Mulefa

Artist: 3djinn

DweebMeter: 4/5

Search DeviantArt.com > Keyword Mulefa for beaucoup more fanart. 

 

mulefa3ai.jpg

 

Found on: www.efestivals.co.uk/forums

DweebMeter: 4/5

mulefa_atal.jpg

 

Found on: http://tuscriaturas.blogia.com/2007/mayo.php

Artist: Amy Thompson

DweebMeter: 3.5/5

 

mulefa.jpg

 

Found on: http://www.hisdarkmaterials.org/srafopedia

DweebMeter: 4/5 

 

mulefathumbs.png

 

Found on: http://www.bridgetothestars.net/fanart/mulefa/

The above is a screenshot of some of the fanart available at bridgetothestars.net

 

zalif.jpeg

 

Found on: http://www.elfwood.com/art

Art by Kate Miller (showing thumbnail)

DweebMeter: 3.5/5

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About alteredlibrarian

When I'm not eating books for lunch, I serve as Youth Services Manager at Patrick Henry Library in Fairfax, VA.
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11 Responses to Mulefa Art on the Web!

  1. kawzmikgirl says:

    Awesome animation on your blog!!

    Team Edward!

  2. Book Dweeb says:

    Thanks! I wish I could take credit for it. EricD did a great job of illustrating how the mulefa move.

  3. Amy Thompson says:

    Dear Book Dweeb:

    I was searching the web for other artists’ impressions of mulefa and I stumbled on this blog. My mulefa concept is the fourth one down (fifth if you count that nifty animation). It’s the portrait-looking one done in pencil.

    Could you please put “By Amy Thompson” under my drawing? Thanks a lot.

    –Amy

  4. Book Dweeb says:

    Will do. P.S. I love your drawing. You’ve got a great talent.

  5. Amy Thompson says:

    Thanks!

  6. B. Murphy says:

    Thanks very much for those pics, helped put the whole “claw” thing into perspective, i couldnt quite picture it until now! :P
    By the way, i think you captured the trunk VERY well amy, its exactly how i had imagined it.

  7. Sandra says:

    The pictures are great – Thanks for putting them together.
    I would like to see the difference between a zalif and a grazer mulefa, because I still cannot really imagine how the grazers move.
    Maybe you find more?
    Best wishes.
    Sandra

  8. Book Dweeb says:

    I haven’t found any grazer art yet. If I do, I’ll post it here :)

  9. Q says:

    I love these! Thanks for finding and posting them. I am very curious as to what the Mulefa look like, how Pullman envisioned them. Though I must not be remembering right, I thought they only had one wheel–most of these depict two wheels. Amy Thompson’s is beautiful, real character in the eyes and face and 3djinn I think represents the best of the diamond shape, no-spine (very hard for me to wrap my head around!) So mad props to all! =)

  10. Eric Dubois says:

    It’s always nice to see my work on other blogs. Check out larger images and animation on my site.

  11. marshfire says:

    Hi, this comment is for Amy Thompson (that’s hoping she see’s this message) Amy, I was hoping you could post a link to your drawings & artwork some time on the web, I really really like to get in touch about HDM artwork.

    All the best

    marshfire

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