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Original post here. Sourced to slaveryfantasies via singoshibari.
This is the cover art from the April 1934 issue of Black Book Detective. The artist is Rafael de Soto, a prolific pulp illustrator and the purported descendant of infamous conquistador Hernando de Soto. (From that same link, de Soto’s tube-girl-to-mermaid mad science transformation cover for the May 1940 Terror Tales magazine is also not to be missed.)
Image provenance by Bacchus at Erosblog.
This is a postcard with the caption in Russian, reading “Парижскій Салонъ 1910. Боксеры. — Жанъ Шарль Піерръ Ля Пались.” The caption translates as “Paris Salon 1910. The Boxers. — Jean Pierre Charles de Chabannes La Palice.” This particular image of the postcard appears to have been scanned and posted to Flickr in 2010. A similar postcard with the same caption in French may be seen here. The image on both postcards is, according to the captions and to this page, a work by Jean Pierre Charles de Chabannes La Palice called The Boxers, which was indeed exhibited at the 1910 “Salon des Artistes Français”:
Depicted, presumably, is a fanciful scene from the Boxer Rebellion, during and after which many lurid accounts of rape and torture circulated.
Image provenance by Bacchus at Erosblog.
Original post here. Sourced to autumnalmutterings.
Original post here. Sourced to danielmurphyfilm.
Original post here. Sourced via metalonmetalblog. Original text:
– Alfred Kubin, One Woman For All (1901)
Original post here. Sourced to isitweirdifindcartoonshot.
Original post here. Sourced to werusdarkworld via greatgrottu.
Original post here. Sourced to humungus via gotham-city-hardcore.