Hmm, if any art at all is OK for this thread, I can offer some.
These are direct scans from pencil drawings, I just improved the contrast a bit.
Assuming they are shown in the order I uploaded them:
The first one is an elven battle mage approaching a fortress in a mountainside. I like the landscape, the shadows and the robe in this image. What I don't like are the fortress' towers. The windows look like they are painted on the walls. In fact, the whole building looks like a cardboard cutout.
The second one is a battle mage looking really similar to that in the first drawing and fighting a dragon. Again, I like the lighting. The dragon's skin is a bit smooth, but show me an actual dragon's skin and I'll do it right
The third one is just a random angry dwarf I drew when A school where I helped handicapped students had "comics" as their art lesson subject. One of the students wanted some advice on how to pose a character the way he wanted without too much meaningless stuff like those circles and straight lines that most art courses suggest.
The fourth picture is the face of an elf (probably that battle mage again, and probably female). I was on a boring seminar and wanted to see if I can manage to draw a face. I got the proportions by using "place fingers on features and then put small spots where they touch the paper"-measuring on my own face.
The fifth is a wizard from a story I wrote (and technically am still writing, since it'S not finished yet). He's called Jonathan and is an astrologist in a dyson-sphere-like world (where the stars are actually street lights of cities on the far side of the world). I drew him because one of the pupils in the art class I mentioned saw the story in the pile of papaer I carried with me all the time, and had some great ideas for the way Jonathan should look. We wanted to make him look scared or insecure, and generally weird.
The last one is a technomancer called William, who is currently "enchanting" slices of cristalline silicon (or in other words: building ICs) while being watched by a gnome technician. The lines in the background should one day become shelves full of weird-shaped crystals.
He's from the same story as Jonathan. I wanted him to look quite young, and a bit similar to Bill Gates.
The dwarf, Jonathan and William are not finished in my opinion. They still need a lot of work, especially shading.