Charlyn Zlotnik
Paul Simonon, The Clash, 1982
Photograph: Black and White Type: Archival Digital Print
The Deepest Red
Lee Brown Coye (July 24, 1907 – September 5, 1981)
American artist probably best remembered for his black-and-white illustrations for pulp magazines and horror fiction, but he produced a variety of works in other media. (Wikipedia)
From our stacks: Dust jacket detail from The Dunwich Horror and Others. The Best Supernatural Stories of H. P. Lovecraft. Selected and with an Introduction by August Derleth. Sauk City, Wisconsin: Arkham House, 1963. “The jacket drawing represents Wilbur Whately of The Dunwich Horror, as conceived by the distinguished artist, Lee Brown Coye, whose macabre conceptions decorated such anthologies as Sleep No More, Who Knocks?, and The Night Side.”
Other Worlds Science Stories, May 1957. Contains “Falcons of Narabedla” by Marion Zimmer Bradley. The cover is credited to Ray Palmer, but a note states that it is “adapted from a black-and-white illustration by Malcolm Smith depicting a scene in Shaver’s Caves.”
Black and white stills of Soledad Miranda in Vampyros Lesbos (1971) sourced from the special features included with the Image Entertainment DVD.
Early everyday bohemian life of Patti Smith, photographed by Judy Linn.
More than 100 black and white photos of young Patti, sometimes surrounded by her lovers at the time Robert Mapplethorpe and Sam Shepard are published in "Patti Smith 1969-1976, Photographs by Judy Linn".
Mexico, Oaxaca or Puebla, Mixtec or Zapotec, 1400-1521
Skull, found in France, with a knife still embedded it it. The skull belonged to a Roman solider who died during the Gallic Wars, ca. 52BC. It was on display at the Museo Rocsen in Argentina.
"Skull Hunt On Pygmie Island" - art by Earl Norem (1961)