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Found 11 record(s) | Page 1 of 2 | Showing results 1 to 10
Mountain Girls of Tibet
Artist: Mort Kunstler
A large gouache illustration for the cover of the October 1960 edition of Stag Magazine. A daring mountain top rescue illustrating the interior story "Three Months With The Wild Mountain Girls of Tibet" - "Sgt. Gregory's Escape From Red Chinese Captivity". A compelling read we are certain and by all accounts an action packed large scale gouache illustration.
Cold War Cathouse
Artist: Mort Kunstler
A tense and hyper-realist original gouache illustration by the highly regarded and prolific illustrator Mort Kunstler, this interior 2-page spread appeared in the May 1963 edition of True Action and possibly as a cover for Male Magazine in 1960. The lurid, defining action-filled image captures the prevailing nihilism associated with the 1960s "sweat magazine" art and envelope-pushing adventure fiction. This large and impacting gouache work takes place at a Korean brothel and plays on the Cold War-era fears which were prevalent in the aftermath of the Korean War.
Top of the World
Artist: Mort Kunstler
A typically action packed interior illustration gouache painting by Mort Kunstler for the April 1957 edition of Sports Afield Magazine. A large menacing polar bear in pre-global warming, shrinking ice cap terrain with a Cessna water landing small aircraft as the backdrop. Nicely matted and framed and in pristine condition. Issue of magazine included in sale, caption reads "Not now!" I screamed at him. Too Late. There was no sound of slug hitting flesh. Instead, it chopped through the fuselage and smashed into the motor...
Russia's Top Rocket Man
Artist: Mort Kunstler
A kinetic, pop culture, post-war pulp painting by Mort Kunstler painted in 1964 and published as a cover in March of 1967 "For Men Only". A fear mongering and chaotic depiction loosely illustrating the story "Belly Dancer Raid to Spring Russia's Top Rocket Man." Painting is very nicely framed and ready to hang.
Subway Train Gang Fight
Artist: Mort Kunstler
A bizarre and gritty subway terror scene by Mort Kunstler from the "War at Home" genre prevalent in 1960s Men's Magazine art. This depiction finds a handful of thugs in their best Lords of Flatbush garb accosting a pretty mod damsel. A square jawed, tough as nails Cold War era Military Man prevails in the name of justice over some assorted juvenile delinquents in this archetypical depiction of the ongoing culture war of the 60s. This is an electric work; if you are a fan of the genre, this gouache painting has it all.
New Guinea GI Raider
Artist: Mort Kunstler
An original gouache on board created for the May 1962 edition of Male Magazine, illustrating "The Daring GI Raider Who Saved Our New Guinea Stronghold". A large, finely rendered scene depicting a gun battle, with requisite yet inexplicable scantily attired native babes, as per the norm of the bizarre and lowbrow world of "The Sweats."
Yank Imposter in the Luftwaffe
Artist: Mort Kunstler
This dramatic and deftly rendered gouache was created as the cover for "Male" February 1966 "Yank Imposter In The Luftwaffe," and reprinted as an interior 2 page spread in the June 1967 issue of "For Men Only" titled "10 Days To Bring In The Death Head General." A remarkably tight work that shows Kunstler at his best, using an almost photo-realist technique to create tension, menace and fear.
Norway's Partisan Nymph
Artist: Mort Kunstler
An original gouache on board created for the cover of the September 1962 edition of For Men Only, illustrating the story Operation"Never-Talk:" Shocking Revenge of Norway's Partisan Nymph. (A Smuggled-In Yank And A Wild Anti-Nazi Underground Girl by James S. Wagner. A large finely rendered scene of a bungled SS operation, with a trio of tightly wound American service men, a gathering of inebriated Nazi's and a pair of scantily clad female secret agents acting as decoys.
Amazing GI Who Took 3 Head Hunting Brides
Artist: Mort Kunstler
A large gouache illustration for the January 1961 edition of Stag Magazine. A daring night time rescue depiction illustrating the interior story "The Amazing GI Who Took Three Head Hunting Brides. A Pacific Island World War II entanglement complete with topless native women and native headhunters and a lone anglo-saxonized square jawed daring G.I.
Cold War Nymph
Artist: Mort Kunstler
An alarmingly disturbing and well rendered original gouache illustration by the highly regarded and prolific illustrator Mort Kunstler, this interior 2-page spread appeared in the August 1961 edition of Male Magazine, illustrating Martin Fass's Million-Dollar Manhunt For A Cold War Nymph. The lurid, defining action-filled image captures the prevailing nihilism associated with the 1960's "sweat magazine" art and envelope-pushing adventure fiction. Text reads "She was the top female agent of BACO-Europe's anti-fascist Assassin's League, and when she fell into enemy hands, the Yanks had two weeks to find her-or it was war in the Middle East."

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