This comprehensive workshop series by industry veteran Terryl Whitlatch focuses on the anatomy and paleontology of real elephants and their prehistoric relatives. Terryl’s in-depth teachings provide the firm foundation necessary for designing elephant-inspired imaginary creatures with ease, authority, and believability. Professional concept artists and students of creature design will gain the essential and practical knowledge necessary to depict animals with a high degree of plausibility and versatility and to apply these principles to create designs suitable for the Entertainment Industry and Scientific Community.
Skeletal, musculature, and shorthand versions of complex anatomy are demonstrated, and Terryl narrates with an in-depth discussion of the natural history and evolutionary processes that have shaped the various species of the elephant family. Her authentic knowledge reveals how the history and evolution of real-world animals have helped influence the design of similar creatures in the realm of Fantasy and Science-Fiction. Terryl covers both realistic and stylistically exaggerated approaches as they apply to animation, games, and film.
Volume 2 focuses on Prehistoric species of elephants, including the Mammoth and Mastodon. The second portion of Volume 2 dives into the design of imaginary, elephant-inspired species. Terryl’s designs include the Oliphant, Behemoth, Exaggerated and Stylized designs, and a final bonus chapter looks at the skeleton and musculature of a Manatee.
Upon completion of this two-volume workshop series, students will gain a solid understanding of the skeletal and muscular anatomies of elephants and their relatives; knowledge of the elephant family and its place in the world across time; and from this foundation, will be able to design creatures inspired by elephants for a wide variety of entertainment-oriented projects — regardless of style or aesthetic.
Volume 1 focuses on the Asian and African elephants and their prehistoric relatives.
12 Lessons
Terryl Whitlatch begins Volume 2 with her lesson that demonstrates how understanding prehistoric anatomy serves both scientific reconstruction and creature design. By systematically building up anatomical knowledge, from skeleton to surface features, artists can learn how to accurately depict extinct animals while also developing skills applicable to designing imaginary creatures. The mastodon serves as an excellent example of evolutionary variation on the elephant theme, showing how nature experiments with different adaptations that artists can study and apply to their own creative work.
Duration: 59m 4s
In this lesson, Terryl showcases the complex process of paleontological reconstruction, where scientific knowledge of comparative anatomy must be combined with artistic skill to visualize extinct animals. Her methodical approach of starting with skeletal structure, adding muscle layers systematically, and finally incorporating surface features like fur, provides a practical framework for creature design and reconstruction. Understanding fundamental anatomy, particularly by comparing it with related living species, allows artists and scientists to make educated reconstructions of animals that haven't walked the Earth for thousands of years.
Duration: 1h 8m 15s
This comprehensive anatomy lesson demonstrates that understanding prehistoric animals requires detailed knowledge of skeletal structure, comparative anatomy, and careful observation. Terryl's methodical approach (building from skull to skeleton to surface) shows how paleontologists and artists reconstruct extinct species using bone structure and muscle attachment points. The woolly mammoth's unique adaptations for Ice Age survival, including its distinctive skull shape and tusks, reveal how form follows function in evolution, making anatomical study both scientifically valuable and artistically rewarding.
Duration: 1h 15m 14s
This lesson demonstrates that accurate reconstruction of extinct animals, such as the woolly mammoth, requires systematic study of comparative anatomy, working through each muscle group methodically while understanding how muscles overlap and insert. Terryl's approach of first establishing the skeleton, then building up musculature layer by layer, and finally accounting for fat deposits and fur provides a professional methodology applicable to both paleontological reconstruction and creature design. This foundational knowledge of real animal anatomy serves as the basis for creating believable imaginary creatures in the subsequent lessons.
Duration: 1h 20m 3s
This lesson demonstrates that successful fantasy creature design requires a deep understanding of real animal anatomy and careful consideration of biological plausibility. Terryl emphasizes that even imaginary creatures benefit from being rooted in nature's principles, as this creates believability and authority that allows audiences to connect emotionally with the design and fully immerse themselves in the story. By studying real elephants and their prehistoric relatives before creating this fantastical interpretation, she ensures her Oliphant design feels authentic and purposeful rather than arbitrary.
Duration: 42m 29s
This comprehensive anatomical drawing lesson demonstrates that successful creature design requires far more than surface appearance. It demands a deep understanding of skeletal structure, comparative anatomy, and biomechanics. Terryl emphasizes that, while much of this detailed skeletal work may never be directly visible to audiences, it fundamentally contributes to creating believable, compelling creatures that resonate with viewers and function practically within production pipelines. Her combination of scientific accuracy and artistic technique demonstrates how to transform a fantastical creature into a character that audiences can connect with emotionally.
Duration: 48m 18s
This lesson demonstrates that successful creature design requires both technical anatomical knowledge and environmental context. Terryl emphasizes that even experts constantly refer to anatomy charts and that forgetting and relearning are normal. She explains why believable fantasy creatures are grounded in realistic anatomy adapted to their fictional environment — this includes avoiding "Frankenbeasts" in favor of creatures that could plausibly exist on their own terms — as exemplified by the realistic approach used in films like The Lord of the Rings.
Duration: 36m
This comprehensive lesson demonstrates how understanding real-world anatomy (specifically elephant musculature) provides the foundation for creating believable fantasy creatures. By systematically building from skeletal structure through muscle layers to final surface details, Terryl shows how anatomical knowledge enables artists to convincingly modify and exaggerate features while maintaining structural credibility. Her Oliphant concept serves as an excellent example of how fantasy design benefits from grounding imaginative elements in biological reality.
Duration: 1h 2m 42s
The behemoth represents an exercise in extreme speculative creature design that pushes biological imagination to cosmic proportions. By creating a living world-carrier that functions as both organism and ecosystem, Terryl explores themes of symbiosis, ecological balance, and the blurring of boundaries between individual creature and environment. Her design demonstrates how creative interpretation of mythological and biblical sources can inspire fantastical yet internally consistent biological concepts.
Duration: 10m 29s
This fundamental lesson focuses on how strong character design requires balancing creativity with anatomical knowledge. Understanding the core features and anatomy of elephants provides a stable foundation for pushing designs toward extreme stylization while keeping them recognizable. Her demonstration of using realistic knowledge as an anchor for "creative wings" can be applied broadly to any character design work.
Duration: 4m 27s
This lesson bridges comparative anatomy by exploring the manatee as an aquatic relative of elephants, demonstrating how evolutionary adaptation transformed land mammals into marine creatures. Terryl's detailed skeletal breakdown reveals both the shared ancestry with elephants (dental structure, skin characteristics, intelligence) and unique aquatic adaptations (reduced cervical vertebrae, vestigial hind legs, flipper-like forelimbs). Understanding these anatomical relationships provides valuable insight for artists studying animal design and highlights the fascinating diversity within mammalian evolution.
Duration: 35m 2s
This anatomical study demonstrates that, despite their fully aquatic lifestyle, manatees retain the fundamental vertebrate muscle structure seen in terrestrial mammals. Understanding manatee musculature provides valuable insights for artists designing or studying marine creatures, as similar anatomical principles apply to whales and other marine mammals. The preservation of certain skeletal elements, such as pelvic bones — even when they are no longer locomotory — shows their continued importance as anchor points for the muscular system.
Duration: 26m 48s
Primary tools
For this workshop you’ll need:
* Note that these programs and materials will not be supplied with the course.
Skills Covered
Who’s this Workshop for?
This workshop is intended for advanced concept artists, creature designers, and illustrators who want to deepen their understanding of animal anatomy and apply it to sophisticated creature design. It is especially well-suited for artists working in film, games, animation, and visual development who need scientifically grounded designs that remain flexible across different styles and production needs.
Advanced students, illustrators, and artists with a strong interest in paleontology, natural history, and speculative design will also benefit from this volume. The workshop assumes familiarity with foundational drawing and anatomy concepts and focuses on elevating an artist’s ability to design believable, imaginative creatures rooted in real-world biology.
Learning Outcomes
By completing this workshop, artists will develop a deep anatomical and conceptual framework for designing elephant-inspired creatures, drawing from both prehistoric research and imaginative world-building.
Key skills include:
- Understanding the skeletal and muscular structures of prehistoric elephants, including mammoths and mastodons.
- Applying evolutionary history and natural history research to inform believable creature design.
- Translating real animal anatomy into original fantasy species while maintaining functional credibility.
- Designing both realistic and exaggerated elephant-inspired creatures for film, animation, and games.
- Using shorthand and abstraction techniques to efficiently represent complex anatomical systems.
- Integrating paleontological accuracy into speculative and science-fiction creature concepts.
- Adapting anatomical principles across multiple artistic styles and production contexts.








