Pulp Art Re-creation: Alien Rescue

Introduction

A re-creation by another newcomer to Erotic Mad Science, Studio Ambobus.

Image

studio-ambobus.alien-rescue

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Source

uncanny-tales-cover

The cover of Uncanny Tales (November 1939), done by J.W. Scott. This cover was researched by Bacchus and there is a discussion where I first blogged about it in the post “Δ 061 – Alien Experimenters” at Infernal Wonders.

The Artist

Studio Ambobus describes its activities as creating “covers for pulp magazines that never existed… but should have!” It has a tumblr called “Naughty Pulps.”

Pulp Art recreation: Suspension

Introduction

A re-creation by a newcomer to Erotic Mad Science, Horst Dounichdy-Glokken.

Image

d-g.dime-mystery

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Source

dime-mystery-magazine

The cover of Dime Mystery Magazine (March 1938). Unfortunately I haven’t been able to identify the original artist. I originally blogged the image at Strung up and Statufied at Infernal Wonders.

The Artist

Horst Dounichdy-Glokken, born 1972 in Oberhoffen-sur-Moder, Alsace, studied Communications Design and Psychology in Brussels and Berlin. She works as a freelance consultant for politicians and business leaders. Under her male pseudonym Horst Dounichdy-Glokken she has been publishing erotic comics with German S/M magazine Schlagzeilen, Weissblech Comics and French publisher La Musardine since 2011. She maintains a professional website here.

Bespoke Art Volume 3 Now in the Archive

I am pleased to announce that Volume 3 of the Erotic Mad Science Bespoke Art is now preserved in the Internet Archive. You can flip through and see what’s there through the Archive’s cunning embedded flip page. Try it and see!

You can access the archive page here, where you can get all 24 images in various archive formats, including a .ZIP and a .CBZ file. All of these are images published before at Erotic Mad Science, mostly as part of our first series of pulp art reconstructions, but many of them are being published for the first time at their full size and resolution, in some times many times that which appeared on this site. Feel free to download and, thanks to the Creative Commons license under which I’ve published them, share all you like.

Pulp Art recreation XX: A spicy adventure

Introduction

A second entry from CG artist KristinF, following a theme for today.

Image

kirstinf.spicy-adventure-stories

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Source

tumblr_ml8gdaoH1V1qz5q5oo1_1280

The cover of Spicy Adventure Stories (July 1935). The artist for the cover, as can be seen in a signature in the lower-left, was H.J. Ward (1909-1945). He has a modest Pulp Artists catalog here. I blogged this image originally in a post “Slave Girl and Racial Stereotype” at Infernal Wonders.

The Artist

KristinF has a DeviantArt site here and an additional, possibly more explicit site here.

Pulp Art recreation XIX: New acquisition

Introduction

Frans Mensink really goes to town on what looks to be a new acquisition in the harem.

Image

mensink.harem-girl

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Source

tumblr_n199kmq4gN1r18mzfo1_1280

Provenance for this cover and the artist can be found in the post “The 1000 slaves of the whip-mad sheik” at Infernal Wonders.

The Artist

Frans Mensink has a DeviantArt site here and a professional site here.

Pulp Art recreation XVII: Reaching for the stars

Introduction

A very precise recreation in her own style by Dark Vanessa.

Image

vanessa-stars

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Source

tumblr_mhlwuxtO731qa70eyo1_1280

Provenance can be found in the original post where I blogged this image, “Reaching for the Stars”, at Hedonix

The Artist

Dark Vanessa has a DeviantArt site here. You can support her on Patreon here.

Pulp Art recreations XVI: Rocketman abduction

Introduction

Lon Ryden re-imagines a rocketman abduction for the 21st century, which I guess will be grimmer than the 20th.

Image

ryden-spoman

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Source

g064a-tumblr_n7ohh7zdcv1tabeogo1_1280

This image was researched by Bacchus, and you can find his finely-detailed account of its provenance in the post “Γ 064 – Rocket Man: at Hedonix.

The Artist

Lon Ryden is the illustrator of, among many other things, the Tales of Gnosis College and We Must Boost the Signal. He has a DeviantArt site here and a professional site here.

Pulp Art recreations XV: Lash the librarian!

Introduction

An entry from a long-contributing CG artist KristinF.

Image

kristinf.lash-the-librarian

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Source

tumblr_nfic1vX9u01rmgef8o1_500

I don’t exactly know the provenance of the illustration, but it appears to be part of a large series of BDSM-related novels written under the name “Nathan Silvers” available here, so if you want to add Daisy-Chain Cheerleaders or Hung Strung Houseguest to your library along with Lash the Librarian, don’t let me stop you. I blogged this image originally in a post “Lash the Librarian!” at Infernal Wonders.

The Artist

KristinF has a DeviantArt site here and an additional, possibly more explicit site here.

Pulp Art Recreations XIV: Grabber

Introduction

Lon Ryden asks himself who will prosper after the apocalypse, and the answer appears to be they that have tanks with giant mechanical grabber things.

Image

ryden-aftermath

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Source

tumblr_n02gbpVSn51suchdko1_1280

The cover of Thrilling Wonder Stories (Spring 1946), painted by Earle Bergey (1901-1952). This artist has an entry at The Field Guide to American Pulp artists here, a page at the American Art Archives here, and there is an official site (listed as “coming soon”) here. A little additional provenance on the image can be found in the post “Attack of the gown-shredding robot” at Infernal Wonders.

The Artist

Lon Ryden is the illustrator of, among many other things, the Tales of Gnosis College and We Must Boost the Signal. He has a DeviantArt site here and a professional site here.