
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Please keep in mind that any moral rights the artist has remain intact under this license.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Please keep in mind that any moral rights the artist has remain intact under this license.
Big scary apes of some kind have a long history in tales of mad science, especially around pretty women, who are ever at risk of being menaced by them, carried off by them, or even transformed into them.
Someone tried getting that sort of mad science excitement into this image, but seems to have missed the mark. This is a publicity still from a 1942 B picture, The Strange Case of Dr. RX. Our rather unimpressed looking damsel is Anne Gwynne (1918-2003) and presumably the man in the gorilla suit is Ray “Crash” Corrigan (1902-1976). Don’t you wish you had a name as cool as “Ray ‘Crash’ Corrigan?” Of course you do.
This image a reblog from a 3 January 2013 post at Infernal Wonders. Its original source is the tumblr Damsel Lover.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Please keep in mind that any moral rights the artist has remain intact under this license.
This image feels very mad science to me, a teleportation experiment gone wrong. A little research shows that it’s part of a cover image for the album Beacon by the Irish indie band Two Door Cinema Club. This is a reblog of a post from 2 January 2013 at Internal Wonders, where there is some additional image history.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Please keep in mind that any moral rights the artist has remain intact under this license.
This image is a darker realization of a scene in one of the Fabuale Atroces Fausti, “In the Kitchen with Dolcetta,” which is published in both English and Spanish editions here at Erotic Mad Science. The artist is Faustus Crow, a newcomer to this site but an old hand at the creation of fantasy, sci-fi, and occult art, with a record of publication going at least as far back as the 1980s. In addition to being an exceptionally skillful artist, Faustus Crow is also an expert on the occult, and you can see elements of that expertise in this illustration: Dolcetta holds in her left hand a fork which refers symbolically to the learned demon Furcas, and in her right a carving knife the handle of which is modeled on an Aztec sacrificial knife. (Faustus Crow makes additional pop-surrealist references to Furcas here and here.
If you’re interested in Faustus Crow’s work (and you should be!) you can find a blog by him here (“Faustus Crow: Shaman Chaos Magick”) and a book website here (“Goetia Girls”). If you want a list of his books you can buy there is one at Goodreads or you can just search for his name at Amazon. You can also, as I do, support his extraordinary art on Patreon.
Esta imagen de “Las necesidades de los muchos” se presenta aquí por acuerdo de sus creadores, Iago Faustus y Dark Vanessa. Por favor, no copie ni reproduzca esta imagen (excepto para uso justo de buena fe) sin el consentimiento de sus creadores. Gracias.
This image from “The Needs of the Many” is presented here by agreement between its creators, Iago Faustus and Dark Vanessa. Please do not copy or reproduce this image (except for fair use in good faith) without the consent of its creators. Thank you.
Esta imagen de “Las necesidades de los muchos” se presenta aquí por acuerdo de sus creadores, Iago Faustus y Dark Vanessa. Por favor, no copie ni reproduzca esta imagen (excepto para uso justo de buena fe) sin el consentimiento de sus creadores. Gracias.
This image from “The Needs of the Many” is presented here by agreement between its creators, Iago Faustus and Dark Vanessa. Please do not copy or reproduce this image (except for fair use in good faith) without the consent of its creators. Thank you.
Esta imagen de “Las necesidades de los muchos” se presenta aquí por acuerdo de sus creadores, Iago Faustus y Dark Vanessa. Por favor, no copie ni reproduzca esta imagen (excepto para uso justo de buena fe) sin el consentimiento de sus creadores. Gracias.