Tolkien's hobbits on display in US exhibit

An exhibition of original material by UK author JRR Tolkien includes illustrations, maps and items related to his books The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings.

Illustrations, maps and other items related to the books The Hobbit, The Silmarillion and The Lord of the Rings are on display in New York until mid-May, part of an event billed as the most extensive exhibition of original material by famed English author and scholar J R R Tolkien.

Besides writing those beloved works, Tolkien (1892-1973) also produced drawings, manuscripts, maps and other designs that reveal his vision for a world populated by hobbits, elves, orcs, dwarves and other fantastical creatures.

Visitors enter the exhibit through a round door that resembles the front of a dwelling in Hobbiton, the home village of Bilbo and Frodo Baggins - the main protagonists of The Hobbit, a children's fantasy novel, and The Lord of the Rings, a three-volume epic novel, respectively.

The exhibit contains 117 objects, including letters, draft manuscripts, illustrations and photographs that give a glimpse into the mind behind Middle-earth in all his facets: as father, husband and author.

The exhibit's numerous manuscripts and letters also provide greater insight into Tolkien's craft as a writer, showing the process he underwent in striving to create a British mythology.

Tolkien conceived of Middle-earth as an imaginary period of our planet's past, a universe populated by hobbits, elves, dwarves, orcs, magicians and other fantastical creatures, including a race of beings that resemble talking trees.

The exhibit contains illustrations of some of these creations, including a purple- and blue-hued mural titled Eeriness that shows a precursor of the wizard Gandalf - one of the protagonists of both The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings - walking through a dark and threatening forest.

Tolkien's scrupulous attention to detail also is evident in various maps he drew of the different places of Middle-earth, including the realms of Mordor and Gondor and the latter's capital city, Minas Tirith.

The renowned author's love of languages - instilled in him by his mother before her death when he was only 12 - led him as a teenager to start devising the Elvish languages he would subsequently develop in his novels and whose first traces are apparent in the exhibition.


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Source: AAP



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