Tumblr favorite #1824: Marga, the Panther Woman

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Original post here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Γ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as Γ 056 – Marga, Panther Woman. Here is what Bacchus found.

This page identifies itself as being from a comic called Marga the Panther Woman by James T. Royal, and it shows Marga’s superhero origin story. According to the Public Domain Superheroes wiki, Marga stories appeared in Science Comics #1-8 and in Wierd Comics #8-20. ComicsVine lists “Origin of Marga the Panther Woman” among the contents of Science Comics #1 (Feb 1940), so we seek out that book at Comic Book Plus. Sure enough, the subject page is the start of an 8-page story beginning on page 38:

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Comic Book Plus speculatively credits (with a question mark) Emil Gershwin as the artist of the first Marga story. For interest, another Marga story can be found online here.

Tumblr favorite #1823: Plugsuit procedure

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Original post here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Γ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as “Γ 055 – Plugsuit Procedure.” Here is what Bacchus found.

This image is the work of an artist who called himself “spworks”, who posted it in several places on the internet in 2003 and requested comments on it at the CGTalk forums for the Society of Digital Artists:

hi.. This is my work..(first time upload in here). Only used Photoshop 6.0.. comment plz

One comment in the subsequent thread asks “Perhaps the plugsuits from Evangelion were your inspiration for her suit? And do I notice some buildings from Final Fantasy Spirits Within through the window?” The artist replied “This picture was influenced by several other artwork. My knowledge of science fiction is limited so I based my work on many others.”

Tumblr favorite #1822: Space dolls

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Original post here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Γ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as “Γ 054 – Space Dolls.” Here is what Bacchus found.

The “Stanton” signature tells us this is by fetish cartoonist and illustrator Eric Stanton. It is the third panel of the first page of a story called Space Dolls:

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According to a post on Vintage Sleaze, Space Dolls appeared in a 1962 Orbit magazine, at a time when “Stanton was sharing workspace with Steve Ditko…and had developed a close working relationship and heavy influence on each other [sic].” The covers of all three issues of Orbit magazine are visible here, but do not reveal which issue contained the Space Dolls story.

Tumblr favorite #1821: You can’t make a woman without breaking some eggs

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Original post here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Γ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as “Γ 053 – Woman, Omelet.” Here is what Bacchus found.

This image’s first discoverable appearance on the internet was on a French-language blog in 2009, where it is credited only with an “images that I love” tag. It has subsequently been shared across a variety of French-language blogs and social media sites, usually called “femme oeuf” or “oeuf femme” (“egg woman”). In 2011 a pair of animated versions (here and here) were made using the trial version of the Sqirlz software for creating animated water reflections. No information could be discovered about the original creator of the image.

Tumblr favorite #1820: Testing the air

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Original post here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Γ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as “Γ 052 – Testing The Air.” Here is what Bacchus found.

This is a cropped version of a photograph by Dangermouse (aka Brian Burton, of the band Broken Bells). The uncropped photograph:

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According to this article, the photo is one of a series of photographs produced by Dangermouse and shown at a New York City release party for Broken Bell’s album After The Disco. Also shown were album covers by artist Joe Escobedo; the photographs are said to “portray the same helmet-clad woman from Escobedo’s covers against gritty, barren landscapes of rubble and water.”

Tumblr favorite #1819: Space pinup

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Original post here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Γ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as “Γ 051 – Space Pinup.” Here is what Bacchus found.

This image made its internet debut in a Flickr set scanned and posted by Edmond Hidalgo, who is quoted on BoingBoing in 2005 with this explanation:

“The other day opening a random calendar I found while I was moving stuff and selecting what to throw away, I found this really nice vintage Illustrations from mexican artists in the calendar, which I fell in love with, so I decided to scan them. Notice the authors’ names weren’t on the calendar or any kind of credit, if anyone knows who are it would be really appreciated.”

This particular image has a stylized “AMartin” signature lower right. Based on that, and on the Mexican calendar art provenance, I was able to turn up this capsule biography of one Angel Martin:

Born in Barcelona in 1932, Martin moved to Mexico and started working at the Galas de Mexico printshop in 1952. This shop specialized in making cigarrette packages, matchboxes and calendars for which superb realists such as Jesus Helguera and Angel Martin would provide illustrations. After 9 months at Gala he had a big enough reputation that he could leave the shop to provide paintings for them and other printmakers. Most of his paintings dealt with propaganda, political and religious. In 1976 Santiago Galas sold 60% of his company to Grupo Carso headed by Carlos Slim who acquired many of the original paintings made for the shop. In recent years Angel Martin has been working themes related to Don Quijote, nudes and mythology. 12 of his works are part of the Soumaya and Telmex museums in Mexico City.

One other Angel Martin painting available online has a different signature style with “Angel Martin” spelled out, but there are similarities in lettering suggesting that it’s the same artist. In further confirmation, the image appears on a Mexican telephone card from the Soumaya Museum, where it is credited on the reverse as “Angel Martin / Sin Titulo [untitled]”:

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The image credit further reads “Colleción Galas de México – Museo Soumaya”, which I make out to mean “Galas Collection of Mexico — Soumaya Museum.” This article in machine translation describes that exhibition, and references the print shop operation where Angel Martin got his start:

Over 500 thousand picture cards advertising the time of 1933-1970 are exposed in the Museo Soumaya Plaza Loreto, in order to pay tribute to each one of the people who worked at the factory recognized Galas of Mexico, the company that developed the most popular calendars of the nineteenth century. “The show takes place on the 18th anniversary of the institution, and is celebrating with these parts for being the first collections that arrived at the museum”, the curator of the exhibition said in a telephone interview. Located primarily in the street of Isabel the Catholic and later in the brick building of San Antonio Abad, Factory Galas of Mexico made ​​and distributed throughout Mexico each of their cards, those which were designed by artists to be the gift of different pharmacies, wineries, creameries, markets and so on.

The peak time was in the 40s, when Santiago Galas brought together a wealth of workers who could realize the calendar as a publicity element of what was Mexico. During this period various artists such as Jorge González Camarena, Eduardo Cataño, Lemon and Jesus Humberto de la Helguera integrated as part of template to design advertising.

Tumblr favorite #1818: Into the cosmos

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Original post here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Γ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as “Γ 050 – Into The Cosmos.” Here is what Bacchus found.

This is an illustration by French artist and cartoonist Jean Giraud, also known (especially for his comic book work) as Mœbius and sometimes as Gir. (His official website is here.) The illustration is titled (at least by art auctioneers) Les Robinsons du cosmos, and according to this site, it appeared in 1970 as the endpapers (“Pages de garde”) of a book by Francis Carsac called Ceux de nulle part – Les Robinsons du cosmos. (Machine translation makes something like “Those of nowhere – The Robinsons of the cosmos” out of that French-language title.) See also this page for more information. A close examination of the cover art and book description here suggests that this was perhaps a book club edition packaging together two novels by the same author, hence the oddly long dual name.

Tumblr favorite #1817: Drink me!

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Original post here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Γ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as “ΓΓ 047 – 049 – Drinkable Girls. Here is what Bacchus found.

This artwork appears on Pixiv with the title 私を飲んで (machine translation: Drink Me) and the subtitle 不思議の国のアリス中 (machine translation: Alice In Wonderland Medium). The artist is Loped, who has a blog here.

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Although I was unable to locate the origin of this photoshopped dissolving-girl image, I did locate the porn model and photo from which it was constructed. The blonde is Stacy Silver, and the photoshop is based on this image from a gallery of wallpaper shots:

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This last artwork is called Drink Me by artist 1loopypunkgirl (Sarah Ashley) on DeviantArt, who writes that it is an “Alice in Wonderland themed montage for my photography / photoshop class.”

Tumblr favorite #1815: Spaceman dildo

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Original post here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Γ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as “Γ 045 Spaceman Dildo. Here is what Bacchus found.

This artwork is by Wallace “Wally” Wood, the famous comic artist. It originally appeared on the back cover of an erotica collection called Gangbang 3:

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A blog post here offers some of the history of that publication:

The fact of the matter is that Woody was never afraid to draw a pretty girl, a naked girl or a girl having sex. Toward the end of his life, pornography became his main source of income, first from PURITAN (a pioneering hardcore newsstand mag), Al Goldstein’s SCREW newspaper and its magazine counterpart, NATIONAL SCREW. Wood’s WEIRD SEX FANTASY PORTFOLIO was the only commercial portfolio he ever released. His latter day move to the West Coast was facilitated by Barbara Friedman’s Nuance Publications which published three issues of (supposedly) all-Wood sex comics in magazine form.

The fact that Wally Wood would do a complete hardcore porn comic somehow seemed at the time not so much a comedown as a natural progression. Starting with his gorgeous EC women, then his fifties girlie cartoons, the clothing optional SALLY FORTH comic strip, the portfolio and the mid-seventies adult magazine work…it just made sense for him to do a full-on sex comic book. In fact, in the aftermath of early seventies”porno chic,” it was a pioneering move for a mainstream comic book artist of his caliber!

The problem, of course, was the circumstances. The times being what they were, GANG BANG could not have existed ten years earlier and yet THAT is when it might well have worked for Wood. By the time of its publication, his health was degenerating quickly and had been affecting his once-pristine art for several years. He was much slower, used more paste-ins and tracings than ever and had no assistants of the high quality he had used for years. As such, the first issue, although clearly Woodwork, is disappointing, the second is without a doubt the worst material he ever had published and the third, posthumous, issue consists of reprints of varying quality from other sources.

GANG BANG publisher Barbara Friedman was, by all accounts, the one to find Wallace Wood’s body after his late 1981 suicide. She had hired him and befriended him but that didn’t keep her from continuing to exploit his name even after his death. A year and a half later, Nuance released GANG BANG # 3, with a cover touting “Wood’s Women and Wit.” The art used on the cover was originally meant for an unrealized Wood project to have been called STRANGE SYMPHONIES.

This issue is actually much better than the previous effort as it deals completely with previously published work. We open with 24 black and white pages of MALICE IN WONDERLAND, the dirty but witty softcore strip the artist had originally published in color in France and in NATIONAL SCREW before his health had gotten too bad . This strip shows Wood at perhaps a peak for his erotic work. Although cut up, repasted and in some cases blown up way too big, the wit and skill show through even though the presentation is hardly the finest this material would see.

This is followed by some reprinted gag pages from SCREW and the SEX FANTASY PORTFOLIO as well as a page of sketches that include everything from SALLY FORTH to THE WIZARD KING! The reappearance of one of the badly drawn Sally pages from the last volume rears its ugly head but then we move on to FLESH FUCKER MEETS WOMEN’S LIB, a second FLASH GORDON parody in this series, this one being done in 1977 in a softcore MAD-style for, I believe, THE NATIONAL SCREW again. It’s not bad.

THE BLIZZARD OF OOZE, again cut up and repasted for some reason, originally appeared in PURITAN and is, as it sounds like, a hardcore WIZARD OF OZ parody. Although not as well-drawn as MALICE, it’s hard to tell just how many of the strip’s shortcomings are attributable to its less than stellar presentation here. Rounding out the issue are a few more extremely well done single panel bits from the Portfolio and SCREW.

For interest, all six of the front and back covers from the three issues of Gangbang can be seen here.

Tumblr favorite #1814: Bionic pin-up

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Original post here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Γ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as “Γ 044 – Bionic Pinup.” Here is what Bacchus found.

This pinup artwork is called Must Be Bunnies and it’s by German artist Simon Eckert (scebiqu on DeviantArt). The artist explains:

My collegue ~Odinoir is busy making a browser game called “Bionic Battle Mutants” formerly known as “Cyber Mutant Street Gangs” and asked me to do a Bionic-themed pinup for it which will appear somewhere in the game.

There’s a further hint of a possible companion “mutants” piece by another artist: “~NaRai is in for making the matching mutant-themed pinup!” However, no mutant-themed piece is visible in that artist’s DeviantArt gallery as yet.