The “Art of Faustie” added to siteroll

Those of you who’ve been following the interesting…interactions between Howard and Moira as The Apsinthion Protocol posts out might note that I’ve got a bit of a taste for monster sex, and if you do to you would do well to follow the new link to “The Art of Faustie” now added to the EroticMadScience siteroll.

Faustie — no, not a kid sister or a mini-me to your humble blogger, the tasteful choices in nom d’Internet being but coincidence — is an artist and animator who really knows how to get things done when it comes to monster sex. A (ahem) taste, called “Explorer.” (Click for full size.)

Dungeon tentacle sex sometimes just sneaks up on you...

One could see this as an object lesson in why when dungeon-delving it is wise to wear pants, but I digress. If this is your cup of goo, by all means head on over, and visit Faustie over at DeviantArt as well. Not only will you find tons of cool art, but you will also find a valuable illustrated document called The Modern Woman’s Strategies for Sex Zombie Survival.

Hey, you never know when that might be useful.

Octo pulp

Borderline as mad science, but definitely pulpy, and definitely a subject we’ve broached here at length at Erotic Mad Science.

This is also evidence on today’s Internet that whatever it is, there’s a site for it.  In this case, a site Poulpe Pulps, a site devoted to pulp covers that feature giant octopuses.  No, not a joke.  And for what it’s worth, I think it’s awesome that we live in a world where one can find a site like this.

On top of that, the site creator put out an appeal to ver readers:  where does this illustration come from?  And as it happens, ve got an answer.

Uncanny Tales Tube Girl

I guess it will take a long time for the subject to get old:  this particular piece of pulp art which appeared on the cover of a short-lived pulp magazine called Uncanny Tales (1939 – 1940) has an unusual appeal, in part because of how explicitly it uses structural elements to make implied nudity possible, but more (for me, anyway) of the “OMG what is happening to me” expression on the face of the model.

Found in this post (with more tube girls) at the very cool blog It’s Dark in the Dark, which has lots of art relevant to thaumatophiles.

Woman in the rings

Much as I encourage you all to peruse the gallery yourselves, I cannot resist posting one more image from the Silverghost pulps:

The gallery labels this “Dr. Ornowski” but unfortunately that doesn’t help me much with provenance.  What does make this intriguing is that it’s another example of the long cultural reach of Metropolis: a woman stands in the middle of rings of mad-science energy undergoing…some kind of tranformation.  The header illustration to Erotic Mad Science is only a very recent example of this visual trope,  though since the one featured here is mid-century pulp art our lovely lady is a bit more modestly clad than Hugo Araújo‘s.

I (and you) should take this illustration as a “write your own story” opportunity.  Is it teletransportationInvisibilityHuman transmutation?  The opportunities are endless…

Silverghost Mad Science Pulp Gallery added to blogroll

If you look in the links bar off to the right, you’ll find a new link to a gallery of mad science pulp art at Silverghost, which contains some very fine examples of the genre.

Like this, for instance.  Mad scientist, pretty girl apparently dissolving in a vat.  Could this be an early example of the Apsinthion Protocol meme?

Chasing the provenance on this one was a little tricky.  It seems to have been the cover art for a pulp magazine called Fantastic Adventures, which according to Wikipedia was published between 1939 and 1953.

I was able to find a scan of the cover online, but it’s a thumbnail so unfortunately I can’s read the date.  However cross-checking the novel The Involuntary Immortals on Rog Phillips’s entry in the Internet Science Fiction Database would seem to place the publication date in 1949.  I would welcome additional provenance in the comments.

“Michiko” art by someone else

I guess while the subject is fresh on the site I should point out that I also came across this pulp cover in the same Otago collection on which I posted yesterday.

I can’t comment about what lies beneath this cover, but I must say the art has a decidedly unpalatable “me love you long time” flavor.  Which means, of course, that I now swear on the sacred stones of R’lyeh that I did not see or have this cover in mind before creating the character of Michiko Maeda.