
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In the 1930s Margaret Brundage was the hottest pulp fiction magazine illustrator. She primarily painted covers for Weird Tales magazine, which published the works of Robert E. Howard, H.P. Lovecraft and other pioneering genre writers. I talk with experts George Hagenauer, Lauren Stump and Steve Korshak of the Korshak Collection about why Brundage’s work was so alluring, and how it taps into current questions about how women are depicted in fantasy worlds. And tattoo artist Mary Joy Scott explains why Brundage had an influence on the art of tattooing.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
By Eric Molinsky | QCODE4.8
19791,979 ratings
In the 1930s Margaret Brundage was the hottest pulp fiction magazine illustrator. She primarily painted covers for Weird Tales magazine, which published the works of Robert E. Howard, H.P. Lovecraft and other pioneering genre writers. I talk with experts George Hagenauer, Lauren Stump and Steve Korshak of the Korshak Collection about why Brundage’s work was so alluring, and how it taps into current questions about how women are depicted in fantasy worlds. And tattoo artist Mary Joy Scott explains why Brundage had an influence on the art of tattooing.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

44,020 Listeners

26,175 Listeners

3,016 Listeners

6,878 Listeners

12,202 Listeners

2,212 Listeners

4,084 Listeners

3,982 Listeners

2,668 Listeners

2,108 Listeners

3,439 Listeners

5,152 Listeners

1,708 Listeners

4,440 Listeners

677 Listeners