My original tumblr post was here. This is work by Alain Aslan (1930-2014), for whom there is an official site here. I found it tweeted by Savage Comics.
Tag Archives: x-ray
Tumblr favorite #2770: What’s within?
My original tumblr post was here, and was tweeted by Weird Woman. This is a detail from a cover painting for a novel (or novelization) X: The Man with X-Ray Eyes. An example of the whole, found at Not Pulp Covers:
And in context:
From Dial B for Blog.
Tumblr favorite #2601: He stripped souls as bare as their bodies
My original tumblr post was here. This image is a promotional poster for the 1964 Roger Corman-directed movie X: The Man with X-Ray Eyes. It was first posted on Tumblr by Steve Niles Tumblr with a source link to Classic Film and TV Café.
Tumblr favorite #2281: More x-ray vision abuse
My original tumblr post was here; the version of this poster in this post is from Wikimedia. This promotional poster from the 1963 movie X: The Man with X-Ray Eyes was first posted on tumblr by horrorsoflife and comes to us via pencilofdoom.
Tumblr favorite #1687: Sci-fi classic II
Original post here.
Original text:
(via Bully Says: Comics Oughta Be Fun!)
Cover of X, the Man with the X-Ray Eyes one-shot (Gold Key, September 1963), painted cover by George Wilson, with a photograph of Ray Milland as Dr. James Xavier
Tumblr favorite #1409: Spider woman
Tumblr favorite #1270: Envelope of flesh I
Tumblr favorite #890: I hope he gets his patent!
Original post here.
Sourced to here. This illustration provides another example of Bacchus’s image provenance research.
This one was at once very easy and very hard. I knew at a glance (even before I saw the signature) that the artist was Bill Ward, but he was so prolific (and the sort of pulp publications he drew for were so numerous and so poorly cataloged) that I was (rightly) worried that it might be impossible to identify the specific publication where this comic appeared.
Bill Ward background info: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Ward_%28comics%29
It is evident that we are looking at a photo of the original art, with the sort of penciled notations on it that were used for newspaper and magazine paste-up back in the days when such was done manually. And the little camera icon embossed in the lower right corner is indicative of a photo used in an eBay auction, where such are embossed by the system on all seller-provided pictures. A quick review of Bill Ward art currently for sale on eBay and still in the system from auctions closed in the last 30-60 days did not reveal the auction, so presumably it closed prior to that.
I was able to find this forum post where this same photographic image appears side by side with a smaller, captioned form of the artwork, presumably as it appeared in one of the many pulp publications where Ward was often published:
http://forums.sexyandfunny.com/showpost.php?s=d1dea31b3d1eb5b146e2846c6b7e166e&p=2717741&postcount=1
http://imgbox.com/adclXf0mSince the forum post is dated 11-06-12, this confirms that the presumed eBay auction took place at least four months ago, which is why the auction (and any provenance that might have been provided by the seller) is no longer in the system.
I also found the captioned version on a Bill Ward fan blog, sadly without further attribution:
http://worldofbillward.blogspot.com/2012/01/how-can-that-be-true-or-false-machine.html
As the URL hints, the caption is “How can that be a true or false machine?”
I wondered whether the use of the phrase “vintage funnies” in the title of the forum thread was merely descriptive, or whether it identified a source publication for the Ward images. However the most prominent publication by that name (the 1970s comics by DynaPub, http://www.comicvine.com/superman/29-1807/vintage-funnies/49-52933/) focused on reprints of comic strips, which (so far as I know or can discern) Bill Ward rarely if ever produced. So that seems likely to be a dead end.
Bacchus is actively taking image research commissions, and if you have adult imagery you’re curious to learn more about, I encourage you to visit Bacchus’s introductory post for his image-searching service, where you can find details about how to commission him.