Robot love

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This artwork is Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep: Lovers, by celebrated (he’s won a Hugo Award) science fiction and fantasy artist Donato Giancola. The artwork title is a reference to the famous novel by Philip K. Dick, on the cover of a 2009 edition of which the artwork was used.
Image provenance by Bacchus at Erosblog.

A most unusual experiment

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This cartoon, captioned “Miss Strauss has graciously consented to a most unusual experiment…”, appears here with the credit “Cabaret 1956”. The reference is most likely to Cabaret magazine; you can see the covers to all 12 issues of the 1956 Cabaret here. An artist’s signature (“Troop”) is visible lower left, but more information on the cartoonist is not readily available. (Noted magazine illustrator Miriam Troop worked in that era, but her signature on this piece for Woman’s Day is quite different.)
Image provenance by Bacchus at Erosblog.

Grace Blackberry

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Original post here. Sourced to randomforeverrandom via girlontentaclesex.

Robo-crucifixion

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Original post here. Image contains the text “McCracken 2001.” Original text:

Crucifixion by ~mccracken

By the killbot reflected

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This artwork is from a late-1980s manga series called “Metal K” about which no great amount of information is available online in English. According to machine translation of Japanese-language sources here and here, Metal K was first serialized in a weekly called “Shonen Jump”. The author/illustrator’s name is given in some sources as Maki Kouji, in others as Koji Maki or Kōji Maki, and in still yet others as Makiraiko-shi. That last link also contains a 656×1024 image of this artwork as it appeared on the cover of a “Jump Comics” publication that apparently collected Metal K into one volume.
Image provenance by Bacchus at Erosblog.