Subject: They're not wrong.
Author:
Posted on: 2015-07-21 09:59:00 UTC

Well, they may be wrong about the colouration - unless I'm colourblinding at it, the only bright colour is that crest, which could well be for display. That's not a full-on Sparkleraptor by any stretch.

But they're not wrong about the rest; that left foot in particular is just scary. And... I see it only has Microraptor feathers on one leg? Perhaps it IS diseased...

I do actually disagree about the quality of the art itself, though. It's... not all that good.

-The Zhenyuanlong suni doesn't seem to be part of the background.
-It's got its mouth open in that 'I am unlike any other predator ever because I roar all the time' post dinosaurs love to take (I love this image, which shows both predator and prey with their mouths shut, because running is more useful than screaming! [Source])
-Its feathers are, um, scratty. Do birds really have gaps between the ends of every feather? It seems pretty unlikely to me. And look at that throat - it's a mess! It's more of a mess than an urban pigeon, and that's saying something.
-The pose is pretty silly, with the wings stretching forward like that. It brings to mind a toddler racing across the room with her arms out to cuddle my leg (which is awkward when I'm trying to walk, but hardly fearsome).

I'm just... not all that impressed.

But I would dearly love to see a new Walking With Dinosaurs-style show featuring modern reconstructions. Feathered maniraptors, and bristly ceratopsians, and marvellously weird Deinocheirus and Spinosaurus, and superpredatory azhdarchids, and ridiculously wide-necked Apatosaurus and Brontosaurus, and... all the bizarre things that make the Mesozoic both stranger and more familiar than we ever imagined.

hS, whose only adventure in paleoart has been Celtic-knotted archosaur sketches

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