A Tier 2 Artist is a respected creative professional whose technical skill, refined style, and reliable body of work make them a notable presence in local markets and patron circles. They are no longer just producing competent pieces. At this tier, their work has identity, consistency, and enough quality to attract repeat buyers and better commissions.
Tier 2 Artists are deeply shaped by apprenticeship, guild advancement, temple commissions, workshop leadership, or years of disciplined practice. They understand composition, material behavior, restoration, presentation, and the difference between routine work and memorable work. Their craft is no longer just functional. It is recognizably developed.
These creatures usually appear as established painters, sculptors, icon-makers, muralists, illustrators, ceramic artists, woodcarvers, or mixed-medium artisans with a known hand. Their clothing is still practical, but often better organized and marked by trade confidence: pigment-stained cuffs, tool belts, waxed aprons, rolled sketches, protective wrappings, and cases built for transport or commission work. They carry themselves like people used to being judged by the quality of what they make.
A Tier 2 Artist commonly sells framed paintings, detailed portrait studies, carved devotional figures, painted household screens, decorative ceramic sets, illuminated pages, custom shop signs, festival masks, etched plaques, miniature sculptures, painted boxes, prepared pigments, quality brushes, varnishes, and partially completed commission pieces. Their stock is more polished and more expensive than that of a Tier 1 Crafter, often with samples meant to impress patrons rather than just fill a stall.
Their working style is controlled, deliberate, and increasingly personal. A Tier 2 Artist can reproduce traditional forms well, but also introduces style choices that make their work recognizable. They handle commissions with more confidence, correct mistakes more cleanly, and understand how to produce pieces suited to wealthier clients, temples, guildhalls, or civic display.
What defines this subtype is skilled cultural production with growing influence. Tier 2 Artists do more than decorate everyday life. They shape how a neighborhood, shrine, guild, or household presents itself. Their work may mark public celebrations, preserve family lineage, glorify patrons, or give visual identity to important spaces.
Tier 2 Artists often work from a permanent studio, an upgraded market space, a guild-backed shop, or a traveling workshop with apprentices or hired help. They are more likely to balance everyday sales with commissioned work, and may have relationships with temples, minor nobles, merchants, or festival organizers. Their income is still variable, but more stable and more reputation-driven.
These creatures are commonly found as guild artisans, portraitists, mural painters, decorative sculptors, temple image-makers, manuscript illuminators, public sign specialists, or respected market artists whose names carry local weight. In settlements, they are often the ones trusted with work people want remembered, displayed, or admired.
A Tier 2 Artist holds modest status rather than simple usefulness. People seek them out not just because they can make something, but because they can make it well. Their work may appear in better homes, shrines, halls, and shops, and their opinion on taste, presentation, or imagery may begin to matter in local circles.
Tier 2 represents an artist that has developed beyond dependable craft into recognized quality. The core traits remain the same—technical skill, creative labor, sellable work, and cultural value—but they now operate with greater refinement, stronger inventory, and clearer reputation. It is no longer just a working maker. It is a true artisan.
| # | Type | Name |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Creature | Artist - Tier 2 |