Posts Tagged Magazine

Naked cartoon hottie with tattoos

3d toon porn

This nude, rude and tattooed raven could easily be gracing the cover of a goth magazine. She is very diminutive, skinny and young. Loves to show off her pale skin covered with tattoos, her flat chest and her bald little pussy. She has a very nice set of boulders that needs to be drilled HARD!

Click here now to see more 3d toons presented by 3DSexClub.com

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Lee Yoo-jeong
Lee Yoo-jeong is a Korean comics artist who creates comics for an adult audience. He made his debut in 1994 with ‘The Sadness in the Blood’. His following comics contained a variety of themes, going from eroticism to science-fiction. In his science-fiction comic ‘Love Machine’, Lee Yoo-jeong showed a sad man who built a machine that represented everything he loved. His next album, ‘Asian’, gave a remarkable comment on the world of dystrophy. Other works include ‘MOON’ and ‘Gamulchijeon’, which contained references to daily violence and the eroticism of young girls.

Yuki Yoshihara
Yuki Yoshihara is a mangaka of shôjo, so-called girl’s comics in Japan. She made her debut in the magazine Bessatsu Comic with ‘Channel no Sasayaki’ in 1988. She has made such series as ‘ ni tsuki’, ‘Ai Suro Hito’, ‘Haa Haa’, ‘O-Bo-Re-Ta-I’, ‘Mata Mata O-Bo-Re-Ta-I’, and ‘Cinderella ni naritai’, which were al; serialized on . Although her initial works were more mainstream Shôjo, most of her later serials were light-hearted sex comedies with explicit sex scenes.

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Bill Ward
Bill Ward, who studied at the Pratt Institute, was an acclaimed “good girl” comics artist. He created numerous romance strips for among others Quality. His most famous creation is ‘Torchy’. In the early stages of his career, he has also done pencil work for such famous comic books as ‘Captain Marvel’ and ‘Bullet Man’, when he was part of Jack Binder’s shop. At Quality, he also took over ‘Blackhawk’ from Reed Crandall.
After Dr. Wetham’s ‘Seduction of the Innocent’, Ward moved from comics to his best known works, his countless pin-up cartoons. His best work appeared from 1957 to 1963 in the Humorama line of digest magazines. Throughout the years, Ward’s work became more and more erotic and even pornographic.

John Willie
John Alexander Scott Coutts was born of British parents in Singapore. He studied in England, then moved to Australia. From there, he sent his designs to the US. Most of his work was published (under the pseudonym John Willie) between 1946 and 1959 in Bizarre magazine, which Willie also edited. His most famous stories were ‘The Adventures of Sweet Gwendoline’, ‘Pauline’s Peril’ and ‘Hairbreadth Harry’. John Willie was a master of the bondage genre, and he created numerous works for private orders, which unfortunately have never been published. He retired to Guernsey, where he died in 1962.

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Laura Pérez Vernetti
Laura Pérez Vernetti drew for the magazine El Vibora from 1981 to 1991. She stands out for her erotic work, and her most famous creations are ‘El Toro Blanco’ and ‘’.

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Luca Tarlazzi
specialized in the erotic genre, also publisher (creator of Selen Magazine). Among the comic book collectors he’s best known by legendary Vixxxen Series. Very high quality color artwork.

Kevin Taylor
Kevin Taylor was born in Harlem, New York. He is one of the most acclaimed artists of color in the world of comics, as well as being one of the most important and youngest names in the erotic comic of the 1990s, due to his character ‘Girl’ and ‘Blue Boy’. Taylor has published in Spain since 1991, the year Kiss Comix was founded, and the erotic comic magazine has consistently featured his spectacular work in its pages.

Brian Tarsis
He first got into B&D illustration back in 1983 after working in Marine Corps. Some of his works are “City of Dreams”, “Tarsis Anthology I”, “Tarsis Anthology II”, “Daphne”, “Wormwood”, “The Long Cruel Winter”.

Luis Tobalina
Luis Tobalina is a veteran of Kiss Comix, a Spanish erotic comic magazine. He has been supplying the review with one-off stories and series since the magazine began in 1991, contributing different extended full-color series like ‘Los perdedores’ and ‘Amigas del alma’. As well as being one of the most prolific Spanish erotic comic artists of recent times, he is also one of the most admired outside of the country, especially in the States, where his work is in the best-seller bracket.

Benkyo Tamaoki
Benkyo Tamaoki makes porn-manga. But not “just” the kind of porn-manga that features as much overt sex as possible and little realistic storyline. Tamaoki’s stories display a great sense of psychological detail, and usually end in a refreshing way. He says about his work: “I want to create porn manga that convey a feeling of everyday life”. His first collection was ‘Ero-i Hon’ (‘Erotic-ish Book’) in 1995. His manga has been published in many magazines, and also been published in the USA. One of his best known mangas is ‘Blood: the Last Vampire’.

Treichler
Treichler was a French Art Deco artist, who contributed comics and illustrations to the erotic magazine Le Journal Amusant in the 1920s.

Téjlor (Lezli Téjlor)
Téjlor is the pseudonym of a comic artist from Hungary, who teamed up with writer Tom Zool to make comics and cartoons in various genres. He created humorous comics, such as ‘Goldie the goldfish’, erotic comics and superhero stories. He worked for popular Hungarian comics magazine Móricka and is a member of cartoonist group Makacs.

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Paolo Serpieri
best known by the Druuna, the most amazing science and erotic fiction series that has ever been made. Eight Drunna chapters were sold in more than a million copies in total.

Franco Saudelli
Franco Saudelli is mostly known as an artist of erotic comics. However, since 1977, Saudelli’s work appeared in several Italian and French magazines, like Lanciostory, Orient-Express, Libération and Charlie Mensuel. In the 1980s, he started making short erotic comics for the magazines Comic Art, Glamour and Diva, sometimes in collaboration with Giovanna Casotto. Bondage scenes play a big part in the stories, for example in ‘La Bionda’, published in album format by Dargaud. Saudelli uses a fluent, elegant, sophisticated style.

Eric Stanton
Russian of origin, Eric Stanton was born in New York. He studied at the School of Visual Arts and made his debut as an illustrator and comic artist in 1947 with Irwing Klaw, a publisher of sadomasochistic paraphernalia. Proving himself a master of the bondage genre, Stanton created an impressive number of stories, such as ‘The Nightmares of Diana’, ‘Marie’s Extraordinary Adventure’ and ‘Phyllis in Danger’. At the same time he worked for magazine La Revue Érotique, using pseudonyms like Savage and John Bee. In the early 1960s, he became an independent illustrator, often working for rich clients who ordered his work for private use. His work has been published in numerous European magazines, like Bédé X, Blue and Kiss Comix.

Barney Steel
Barney Steel is the comic artist of ‘Armageddon’, an underground comic which started in 1972. It was published by Last Gasp and ran for three issues. ‘Armageddon’ presented an erotic tale set in a fantasy galaxy.

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Massimo Rotundo
Massimo Rotundo’s first comic exploits were published in the magazines Lancio Story, Skorpio, L’Eternauta and Orient-Express. Afterwards, Rotundo created ‘Il Detective senza Nome’ and ‘I Padroni del Silenzio’, that were both published in album. In 1987, he created the series ‘Sera Torbara’ in Comic Art. Afterwards, Rotundo turned to erotic comics, starting with ‘Ex-Libris Eroticis’ in Playmen. For this same magazine, he started the series ‘Rudy X’ (with Franco Saudelli and Rodolfo Torti) and ‘Guerra Calda’. With the Belgian Jean Dufaux, Rotundo created a comic biography of Paolo Pasolini, entitled ‘Pig! Pig! Pig!’. He also joined Bonelli publishers, where he became an artist of the series ‘Brendon’.

Luis Roca
Luis Roca was the artist on the ‘Scarth’ series that ran in the English tabloid The Sun from 1969. Luis Roca and writer Jo Adams created a series that mixed science-fiction with police intrigues. Scarth was a young woman that died in a car accident, but returned to life after a brain transplant in 2170. Victim of a prudish censorship, the series became less erotic from 1972 and was continued under the name ‘Scarth AD 2170′. Luis Roca has illustrated more erotic comics, such as ‘Julia o Julio’, that appeared in Colección X of La Cupula publishers.

Matias Rodval
Matias Rodval is the artist of the comics ‘Orinoco’, ‘Jaïra’ and ‘Corveïro’, which he produced with writer Julio Braz. He is mainly an artist of erotic comics, like ‘Os 120 Dias de Sodoma’. He founded the Brazilian comics magazine Grafipar in the late 1970s, along with fellow artists Mozart Couto and Watson Portela. They published about 40 issues between 1978 and 1982, and the stories varied from science-fiction to horror, but always with an erotic element.

Luis Royo
Luis Royo started drawing comics for different fanzines in 1978. Between 1981 and 1984, his comics were published in Comix International and Rambla magazines. Royo began his career as an illustrator in 1983. His works made it out of Spain and were published worldwide. Royo created covers for American magazines, such as National Lampoon and Heavy Metal, for which he also did erotic and fantasy art.
Three Royo books, ‘Women’, ‘Malefic’, and ‘Secrets’, were published by Norma Editorial, starting in 1992. In 1998 Royo created the art book, ‘III Millennium’. In 1999 his ‘Dreams’ art book was published, and showcases his previous ten years of commissioned illustrations. Another art book, titled ‘Prohibited Book’, was published later that year. In 2001 ‘Evolution’ was published, which shows a lot of Royo’s book cover illustrations with a somewhat mythical, erotic quality.

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George Pichard
Georges Pichard studied at l’École des Arts Appliqués in Paris. Later, he returned there as a teacher. He went into publishing, but in 1946 he switched to illustrating. He worked for various magazines and made his comic debut in 1956 with ‘Miss Mimi’. In 1964, he met writer Jacques Lob, with whom he created some superhero parodies such as ‘Ténébrax’ and ‘Submerman’, before entering the field in which he became famous – erotic comics.
The first of this genre was ‘Blanche Épiphanie’ in 1967. In 1970, he created, together with writer George Wolinski, his most famous character: Paulette. Many other round-breasted beauties followed her, like Caroline Choléra, Marie-Gabrielle and Carmen. Pichard worked together with various writers, of whiom Danie Dubos was one of the most interesting for her outstanding scenarios. Pichard adapted some of the world’s famous erotic stories such as ‘Mémoirs d’un Don Juan’ by Guillaume Apollinaire and ‘The Kama-Sutra’ by Vatsyayana.
Pichard’s style is immediately recognizable: he draws tall, well-endowed women, whose starry eyes with excessive make-up give them a teutonian and gothic look. Apart from being a master of the erotic genre, Pichard also illustrated countless books and magazines, drew humor cartoons and made lithographs in his more than 40-year long career. He died in June, 2003.

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Tayyar Ozkan
Tayyar Ozkan was born in Turkey. He published his first cartoons in local political newspapers in 1978. In the following years, he published his work in several humor magazines and newspapers. He also illustrated children’s books and greeting cards. After moving to the USA in 1989, he worked on graphic and textile design. His first comics were published in World War 3 Illustrated. His creation ‘Caveman’ first appeared in Heavy Metal in 1993. A ‘Caveman’ graphic novel appeared in 1997. He cooperated with writer Joel Rosse and Amos Poe on the mystery book ‘La Pacifica’ for Paradox/DC Comics. He inked four issues of ‘The Dreaming’ for DC/Vertigo. He also contributes to the collection ‘The Big Book Of…’ at Paradox.
Ozkan is furthermore the artist of erotic books like ‘Bushwhacked’, ‘Cave Bang’, ‘Pet’, ‘Fletshpot’, and ‘Lewd ’, all published by Erox Comix. He also produces erotic drawings for several magazines in the USA (Screw, etc.) and in Europe (Penthouse Comix in Spain, Blue in Italy etc.). More recently, he created the comic strip ‘Cave’n', and he worked on animated ‘Caveman’ shorts.

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Ignacio Noé
Great Argentinean artist known by very colorful high quality comics. The scripts are also always good too. Responsible for gems like Ship of Fools, Piano Tuner, Doctor I’m Too Big, The Miracle and many others. He did plenty of mainstream comic books as well.

Rogério Nunes
Rogério Nunes is a Brazilian comic artist who came to Europe because of his love affair with a Belgian girl. While living in Leuven and Gent, he became the apprentice of comic artist Ferry. He became especially known for his work on the popular humorous-erotic ‘Rooie Oortjes’ series. He also contributed to the collection ‘Fin de Semaine’.

Keiko Nishi
Keiko Nishi grew up in an area where teaching is one of the most respected careers. Manga was not allowed in the Nishi household, and Keiko was expected to become a teacher, like her father. During her study, a friend asks her to draw for the notorious magazine June, which specialized in homo-erotic stories. It was the first manga Nishi drew and the correspondence school’s “headmistress”, manga artist Keiko Takemiyashojo praised her work. In 1988, Keiko Nishi made her professional debut in the magazine Petit Flower.
After graduating, Keiko Nishi started teaching, but she quit after six months. Then she started drawing manga full-time, but didn’t enjoy it. For Nishi, drawing manga was an outlet for frustration and stress. Ironically, her anthologies ‘Gotta Become an Angel’, ‘I Wish I Was a Bird’, ‘When Water Turns to Ice’, ‘September’, ‘Another Ocean’, ‘Love Song’, ‘The Poor Princess’, and ‘Elevator Girl’ are considered her most powerful work. It was not until 1993 that Nishi started to enjoy drawing manga. She drew ‘The Beauty in the Hagiwara Shop in District Three’ and ‘The Rosemary Hotel: Vacancies Available’. Nishi has carved a niche for herself beyond standard genres, and she is sure to continue drawing for many years.

Kiriko Nananan
Kiriko Nananan made her comic debut in 1993 in Japanese magazine Garo with ‘Hole’. Her work is listed among the ‘typically female manga’, a genre that has developed in Japan since Murasaki Yamada, in the 1970s. It realistically and poetically depicted the casual, everyday life of women. During the eighties and nineties, more female manga artists started making comics about being women and sex from a female perspective. Nananan has rightly earned her fame in this field, creating personal and sensitive stories. In 1996, she published the short story collection ‘Water’. Two of the stories in this book have been printed in ‘ Comics Japan’, a collection of modern Japanese underground comics.

Gô Nagai
Gô Nagai is one of the most important innovators of the manga genre. He introduced eroticism in children’s comics (‘Harenchi Gakuen’) and he developed the concept of giant robots being able to transform (‘Mazinger’, ‘Goldorak’), an idea that has been used in many television series afterwards. He industrialized his production by creating his Gô Nagai’s Dynamic Productions, employing more than 30 assistants.
His series ‘Harenchi Gakuen’ appeared from 1968 to 1972 in Shônen Jump. This series, about a school, broke various taboos, using subjects as voyeurism and sex. The series ended dramatically: during a massacre all the characters died. After ‘Harenchi Gakuen’ Nagai started the ‘Mazinger Z’ series, later renamed to ‘Great Mazinger’ and ‘God Mazinger’. At the same time, Nagai started the series ‘Devilman’, about a hero fighting hordes of demons.

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Milo Manara
A famous highly respected in both mainstream and erotic niche. Worked with Hugo Pratt and Federico Fellini. His the most well known erotic series Déclic (Click) started in 1983 and has finished with fourth chapter in 1998. His erotic books were published in U.S. by Eurotica of NBM Publishing, NYC.

Dick Matena
Very established artists from Netherlands with long list of published works. As far the adult genre goes, he’s most known by They Are So Nice softcore series.

Giuseppe Manunta
Italian artists with very special pencilling and coloring style, most of his works can be found in the Selen Magazine and the best known series are Eros and Souvenir. Although he has illustrated famous series like ‘Dylan Dog’, he is mostly known for his erotic work. Most of his work in this genre is published in the erotic magazine Selen, where he created series like ‘Eros’ and ‘Souvenir’. An album appeared in 2002, ‘Contrôle de Peau Liste’.

Mónica & Beatriz
Mónica & Beatriz came to work for erotic comics magazine El Vibora straight from school. Thanks to their stories full of ghoulish humor, these two bouncy girls from Madrid quickly captured the hearts of the magazine’s readers. Right now they’re the most popular and successful team working in Spanish erotic comics – with Mónica the most admired cover artist – at both the national and international level, triumphing in all those countries where censorship permits: France, Italy, Denmark and Sweden.

Paula Meadows
Paula Meadows comes from a middle class British background. During the late ’80s, she shared a London apartment with writer Frank Russell, and painted erotic art under the name Lynn Paula Russell.
As an actress, she appeared in Hair, then began posing nude for English sex magazines in the late ’70s. Paula met Mike Freeman and debuted in Truth or Dare, based on a script by Frank Russell. Meadows then fought with Freeman and moved to New York to pursue her porn career.

Michael Manning
Born in Queens NYC and raised on Massachusetts’ North Shore, Manning went on to study film and animation at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. He began publishing his black and white erotic comix in 1987 while working as an animator and director of short films, commercials, and music videos.
A move to San Francisco in 1991 coincided with his decision to focus on comix and erotic illustration full-time. Manning continued to self-publish and produce work for San Francisco’s emerging SM/sex-zine community while his artwork and stage/costume design for multi-media performances appeared regularly at local music venues and fetish events. Much of his graphic work from this period has been collected in Lumenagerie (1996/NBM) and Cathexis (1997/NBM). His artwork has been exhibited in New York, Chicago, Miami, Los Angeles, Japan, and Italy. The Spider Garden has been translated into French, German, and Italian.
Early exposure to Japanese animation, fairy tale book illustration, American and European comix, and mythology of many cultures has contributed to the formation of Manning’s style. He is a great admirer of the Symbolist and Pre-Raphaelite art movements as well as the classical ukiyo-e prints of Tsukioka Yoshitoshi and Unagawa Kuniyoshi.

Stefano Mazzotti
Stefano Mazzotti is an artist of erotic comics for the Italian Selen magazine. His stories are characterized by the varying historical settings and locations.

Suehiro Maruo
Suehiro Maruo is a self-taught high school dropout and former shoplifter who began drawing comics at the age of eighteen. His first work, submitted to the weekly manga Shonen Jump, was promptly rejected. His dark style fantasy dreams didn’t fit in the commercialized, mass-market magazines. It took five more years before he started drawing comics again, this time for Ero-manga. Besides trying to make a living out of his talents, it was also part of a quest for artistic freedom. Maruo draws nightmares. In the tradition of muzan-e (atrocity print) woodblock masters of the 19th century, he drew short stories of axe murders, abortion, rape and incest in as much graphic detail as the obscenity codes allowed.
But Maruo is not just another “sex and violence” manga artist – he is one of the greatest retro-artists working in the manga field today. His drawings are elegant, and he uses innovative page designs. Today, Maruo’s art and stories go far beyond the readers of Ero-manga; his work is sold in deluxe hardback book format, and limited editions of his lithographed prints sell for high prices. He has realized that his work is most powerful and lyrical when he refrains from sex and violence, and so today he is working on a new series for the mainstream manga magazine Young Champion. Maruo’s most famous works are ‘Planet of the Jap’ and ‘Mr. Arachi’s Amazing Freak Show’.

Matrix (Thierry Martin)
Thierry Martin was born in Beyrouth, but moved to France in 1975 during the civil war. During his art studies, he had his first publications in some erotic magazines, adapting the pseudonym Matrix. He then worked in the animation field for several years. In 2002, he began his comics series ‘Le Pil’ in cooperation with scriptwriter Olivier Taïeb at Dargaud.

Youji Muku
Youji Muku was the editor of the Japanese S&M magazine Uramado. When he was 40 years old, he made his professional debut as an artist, specializing in erotic pencil drawings of bondaged women. When he died at age 72, he left an impressive oeuvre. A selection of Youji Muku’s comics, prints and illustrations have been collected in the book ‘Jyo’ (‘Rope’).

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In the 90s, Solano Lopez took on erotic comics. Big hits were ‘El Prostíbulo del Terror’, also with a story by Barreiro (and the two sequels about the erotic story of Lilian & Agatha), and ‘Silly Symphony’, a full-color series without words for the magazine Kiss Comix. Solano has received the First Prize for the Best Erotic Author in the Barcelona Erotic Salon and the Diario de Aviso’s Prize for the ‘Best Realistic Cartoonist’.

Dino Leonetti
Dino Leonetti was the artist of the erotic ‘Maghella’ comic, that appeared at the publishing house Publistrip from 1974 throughout the 1970s. The texts of this erotic comic were written by F. Arrasich. Leonetti eventually founded the Dino Leonetti studios, where artists like Roberto De Angelis and Giuseppe Barbati made their debuts.

Lucques
Self-taught artist Lucques saw his first illustrations published in Lui in 1969. In the same year, he started working for Pilote, a magazine for which he made several comics. In the mid-70s, he started working for l’Écho des Savanes and Fluide Glacial on the series ‘Le Tombeur de haut’, ‘Clitounet et Clitounette’ and ‘Freudaines’.
In 1981, he started publishing his own work, like ‘Les Fadas du Zizi’, ‘Les Dragueurs’ and ‘l’Encyclopédie Aphrodisiaque’. Lucques is a master of erotic comics.

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Hanz Kovacq
French master of , the author of mega-famous Princess Hilda Series. His books contain very extreme hardcore materials and therefore aren’t widely published, however translated versions can be found on the web. There are definitely only 3 Hilda chapters – don’t look for #4 as it doesn’t exists, but make sure you also check Diane de Grand Lieu.

Lou Kagan
Artist who did work in several HOM magazines and published several comics, including the serialized “Cassandra’s Web,” “Manor De Sade,” “Vanda and the Amazons,” and “Perils of Penelope.” He also proved himself a great photographer with the HOM series, “Glamour In Bondage.” In recent years, he has added bondage and forced feminization to his repertoire, with paintings in Forced Womanhood Magazine and the comic “Lady Lovelock.”

Shintaro Kago
Shintaro Kago’s style has been called “fashionable paranoia”, dealing with themes like extreme sex, violence and abnormality. He has been published in several adult manga magazines, gaining him considerable popularity. His short story ‘Punctures’ (about a man who is so paranoid about getting holes in anything that he rather makes the punctures himself before it really happens) has been translated into English and published in the ‘ Comics Japan’ collection of underground publications. Offers have been made to publish his work in France.

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Ryoichi Ikegami
Ryoichi Ikegami saw his first short comic published in the magazine Garo. This comic was noticed by Shigeru Mizuki, who took Ikegami as his assistant. He started his first series, a western trilogy, at age 24. Success came in 1973 when he took on the series ‘ Boy’, along with Kazuo Koike. Two of this series, both published by Shôgakukan, were introduced on the American market in 1987 and 1989: ‘Mai the Psychic Girl’ (with Kazuya Kudo) and ‘Crying Freeman’ (with Kazuo Koike). This first series was one of the comics that started the success of manga in America, and the second was about the war of police and Japanese gangs against the Chinese mob. Other series that Ikegami made are ‘Otoko ’ (with Tetsu Kariya), ‘Sanctuary’ (with Sho Fumimura), ‘Nobunaga’ (with Kazuya Kudo) and most recently, the erotic series ‘La Colombe Rouge’, again with Kazuo Koike.

Haruka Inui
Haruka Inui was born in the Yamaguchi prefecture. He is one of the best known present-day authors of erotic mangas. After graduating in social science, he began his career in 1981 with the SF manga ‘Parallel Ami’. In 1984, he wrote ‘Future Policeman Urashiman’ (a comic version of a famous Tatsunoko Production cartoon). He is the author of the funnyerotic serial ‘ Clinic’, a bestseller which is published by Shoten since 1988. Inui is also extremely popular in Europe. He also released ‘Mistress War’ (1993), ‘The stories of ’ (1994), ‘Ranmaru XXX’ (1997) and ‘Patty, the High School Fighter of Love’ (2002).

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Melinda Gebbie
Melinda Gebbie discovered comics in 1973, when she met Lee Marrs at a publishers’ fair. Lee asked her to contribute to Wimmen’s Comix, and Melinda, who had been a fine artist until then, decided to make her first comix. In 1996, Gebbie teamed up with writer Alan Moore on the erotic comic series ‘Lost Girls’. With the same writer she made ‘Cobweb’ in 2001.

Toni Greis
A younger adult artists from Germany, published before in underground magazines then moved forward to erotic graphics novels. His best known series is “Alraune”.

Erich von Gotha
Erich von Gotha is one of the masters of contemporary erotic comics, though many would label his work as soft porn. Erich uses different painting and illustration techniques to tell his erotic stories, usually with a strong element of bondage and S&M sex. Some of the titles he created are ‘Les Malheurs de Janice’ (‘The Troubles of Janice’), ‘Twenty’, ‘The Dream of Cecilia’ and ‘A Very Special Prison’. His work has also been published in magazine BD Adult.

Salomon Grundig
Master fetish artist from France. I don’t know much about his biography, but apparently Salomon Grundig is a pseudonym of an argentinian artist: Carlos Pedrazzini. The drawings will be made by the Argentine sketcher Carlos Pedrazzini is another reference to his skills in putting together a story board for a comic series.

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