“I was drawn (pun not intended) to the scene of the River Styx and Charon the Boatman because it was so vivid in its description and action, and I had a clear sense of how I imagined the setting would look on paper. Plus, the idea of this boatman has long intrigued me since I learned of the Underworld in lower school - who is he, why is his job what it is, etc. I decided to depict the part, specifically, where huge Aeneas enters the boat because it was pretty darn cool to see our protagonist bypass such strict laws on behalf of his journey and his piety and honor towards his father. I've always liked the uber-masculine armored Trojan look, so I chose that for my Aeneas' appearance as opposed to more casual clothes. It also gives more of a sense of preparedness and unease in an unfamiliar and spooky place. In the case of Charon, I chose the faceless hooded figure due to my seeing him as not exactly human, but not exactly a ghost either, just a bridge between both. The Sibyl was more an afterthought, as she wasn't as significant to this particular moment as the other two, but I included her on the dock (wearing her robe she had hid the golden bough in) for accuracy. Lastly, the appearance of the ghost on the bench was drawn pretty much directly from popular media, for no particular reason, and is depicted as a very slightly humanoid cloud (like the kind a child would impersonate with a sheet). On the right side is the silent grove the Sibyl and Aeneas were coming from, and on the left is a sort of foreshadowing to what happens after this scene, when they encounter Cerberus. I tried to distance the sentinel to give a sense of the scale of the Underworld, and added a background for him to be a part of (with some more river in the back as well). All in all, a very fun scene to draw, and not having to deal with faces was a plus as well!”