1. Eric Stanton

    Eric Stanton was an American bondage and fetish illustrator, cartoonist, and comic-book artist. Although the majority of his work depicted female dominance scenarios, he also produced work showing the inverse. Stanton also incorporated bisexual, homosexual, and transgender imagery into some of his later work.

  2. Tom Of Finland

    Tom of Finland (May 8, 1920 - November 7, 1991) (born Touko Laaksonen in Kaarina, Finland) was a fetish artist notable for his stylized homoerotic art and his influence on late twentieth century gay culture. Over the course of four decades he produced some 3500 illustrations, mostly featuring men with exaggerated primary and secondary sex traits: heavily muscled torsos, limbs, and buttocks, and improbably large penises.

  3. Michael Manning

    Michael Manning is a fetish artist based in Los Angeles, California, having moved there from San Francisco, California in late 2005. NBM has published several collections of his work, including "Cathexis" and "Lumenagerie", and a series of graphic novels, "The Spider Garden" series, which consists of, in order: "The Spider Garden", "Hydrophidian", "In a Metal Web", and "In a Metal Web II".

  4. Robert Bishop

    Robert K. Bishop (1945 - 1991) was an American bondage artist, often credited as The Bishop or simply Bishop. Born in Michigan, he has been compared with John Willie and described as the "Rembrandt of bondage art". His work has been published extensively in bondage magazines, especially those of Centurions Publications and the bondage publisher House of Milan. His work was known for being very detailed and vivid.

  5. John Willie

    John Alexander Scott Coutts (December 9 1902 - August 5 1962), better known as John Willie, was a pioneering fetish photographer and bondage artist.

  6. Dolcett

    Dolcett is a pseudonymous comics fetish artist from Toronto, Canada, who became famous mainly because of the Internet. Dolcett, who first became active in the late 20th century, draws scenes of bondage, extreme torture including impalement, cannibalism (specifically gynophagia), and murder or execution of nude women, often representing these acts as consensual. His mostly black and white drawings have a distinctive style that makes them immediately recognizable.

  7. Sardax

    Sardax is the nom-de-plume for an English artist based in London who specializes in fantastical images involving various forms of female dominance. He is best known for digital images displayed on the internet, but can be commissioned for a hardcopy drawing or watercolour.

  8. Irving Klaw

    Irving Klaw (November 9, 1910 - September 3, 1966) was an American photographer and filmmaker. Klaw is best-known for operating a mail-order business selling photographs and film of attractive women (sometimes in bondage) from the 1940s to the 1960s. He was one of the first fetish photographers, and his model Bettie Page became the first famous bondage model. He was born in Brooklyn, New York. His family business, Movie Star News, started as a magazine store.

  9. The Hun

    Bill Schmeling, a.k.a. "The Hun", is a Portland, Oregon based, homoerotic, homomasculine fetish artist active in the late twentieth and early twenty-first century. The Hun as a pseudonym personifies the intense subject matter of his work, which focuses on scenes involving hyper-masculine muscular characters, sadomasochism, prison rape and brutality, scatology, leather and uniform fetishes, police and military settings, and other scenes of extreme gay sexuality.

  10. Gene Bilbrew

    Gene Bilbrew (1923 - 1974) was a fetish artist notably employed at Irving Klaw's Movie Star News/Nutrix company. He also had many illustrations published in "Exotique" magazine between 1956 and 1959. He drew under a range of pseudonyms, including ENEG, Van Rod and Bondy. Gene Bilbrew began his career in the Los Angeles Sentinel with the series "The Bronze Bomber" - coauthored by Bill Alexander. He also wrote the series "Hercules" in "Health Magazine".

  11. Hajime Sorayama

    Hajime Sorayama is a Japanese illustrator, famous for his vivid hyper illustrated style. He does ASFR drawings of female pin ups and erotic art that are super realistic and also draws robot women, cyborgs and other illustrations of humans and animals. The abstract originality and futurist vision of Sorayama surpass the erotic form and maintains a growing number of mainstream admirers. Sorayama is also often described as an imaginative modern day Vargas.

  12. Namio Harukawa

    "Namio Harukawa" is a Japanese artist known for his realistic femdom erotica drawings. Harukawa's drawings feature beautiful, voluptuous women with large breasts, wide hips, round buttocks and thick legs dominating, overpowering and humiliating smaller men. Harukawa's women are both Asian and European in appearance, and a few times African. Harukawa's women usually have an aloof look on their faces as they dominate hopeless men.

  13. Dirk Hooper

    Dirk Hooper (born 1969) is an American fetish photographer and fetish artist. He was raised in Moore, Oklahoma, where he resides today. He attended the University of Oklahoma in 1988 for filmmaking and again in 1999 where he pursued a degree in media arts with an emphasis in photography. During the mid nineties, Dirk had a stint as a comic artist and comic writer on a comic named "Rough Cut" and a pin up comic titled "Bad Girls".

  14. Brian Tarsis

    Brian Tarsis is an American fetish artist, working for bondage and fetish magazines. His first bondage illustrations were for the Harmony Concepts company in 1984. He switched to the House of Milan and its parent company London Video in 1990, and moved to B&D Pleasures in 1996. He has published several graphic novels, including "City of Dreams" (from Eros Comics) and "Daphne" (from B&D Pleasures).

  15. Patrick Conlon

    Patrick Conlon is an illustrator and tattooist in [[New York]. He wrote and illustrated the graphic novel "Swarm", and collaborated with Michael Manning, another fetish artist, on "The Tranceptor Series". In the 1990s Conlon worked as a tattooist in the San Francisco shop "Everlasting". where he works whenever on the West coast. He can also be found at two shops in NYC, one called Macdougal Tattoo.

  16. Lou Kagan

    Lou Kagan (1945(?) - Present) is an American bondage artist who started as a photographer working for the famous House of Milan. He went on to do bondage and fetish art and full comic stories. His work has been published extensively in bondage magazines throughout the 1970s, 1980s and through to the new millennium. He is known for producing pulp style adventure scenarios with burly men and petite women, always with an undercurrent of humour and fun.

  17. Drubskin

    Drubskin, also known as "Drub", is a San Diego, California based, homoerotic, homomasculine fetish artist and a member of Skinheads Against Racial Prejudice active in the late twentieth and early twenty-first century. Drub as a pseudonym given to him when he started a web column on a gay internet erotica magazine called Nightcharm. Drub is a play on the verb which means to beat or thrash which sums up his writing style.

  18. Trevor Brown

    Though presently living in Japan, Trevor Brown is an English artist from London whose work explores paraphilias, such as pedophilia, BDSM, and other fetish themes. Trevor Brown's art has been featured in Adam Parfrey's Apocalypse Culture II, and in Jim Goad's ANSWER Me! zine, as well as a variety of other publications. His work has been featured as cover art for a number of bands, including Coil, Deicide, Whitehouse, GG Allin, John Zorn, Kayo Dot, Venetian Snares, …

  19. Franz von Bayros

    Franz von Bayros (1866, Zagreb, Croatia - April 3, 1924, Vienna, Austria) was an Austrian commercial artist, illustrator, and painter best known for his controversial "Tales at the Dressing Table" portfolio. Von Bayros belonged to the Decadent movement in art, often relying on erotic themes and phantasmagoric imagery. At the age 17, von Bayros passed the entrance exam for the Vienna Academy with Eduard von Engerth.

  20. Georges Pichard

    Georges Pichard was a French comics artist, known for numerous BD magazine covers, serial publications and albums, stereotypically featuring partially exposed voluptuous women.

  21. Bernard Montorgueil

    Bernard Montorgueil (? - ?) was a fetish artist and BDSM artist whose works were published in the 1920s and 1930s. Most of his work has femdom-malesub themes.

  22. Chris Achilleos

    Chris Achilleos (born 1947) is a painter and illustrator who specializes in fantasy artwork and glamour illustration. Born in Famagusta, Cyprus, his family emigrated to the United Kingdom in 1959, where he currently resides. His work has appeared in "Heavy Metal" and "Radio Times" magazines, on book covers (including series based on the Conan the Barbarian character and TV's "Doctor Who"), and in collections of his own work.

  23. Malcolm McKesson

    Malcolm McKesson (1909-1999) was an American outsider artist known for his ballpoint pen drawings and his erotic fiction.

  24. Mario

    Mario was a fetish artist who worked for a short period of time for Irving Klaw's Movie Star News company. He drew two complete serials for Klaw -- "Captives of the Scientists" (1954) and "Prisoners of the Inquisition" (1955) -- and an unfinished piece called "Rubber Queen's Captives" (1957). All three stories were reprinted in their entirety in Belier Press's Bizarre Comix #6. Unlike his contemporaries Eric Stanton and Gene Bilbrew, …

  25. Carlo

    Carlo (? - ?) aka Charléno was an anonymous, probably French fetish and BDSM artist whose works were published in the 1930s. Most of his work has femsub themes. His style was a precursor to that of John Willie. He illustrated several books, such as 'Dressage', 'Bagne de Femmes', 'Servitude', 'Dolly, Esclave', 'Despotisme Feminin', 'Cuir & Fouet', 'Dolorès Amazone', 'Le Cuir Triomphant', 'La Madone du Cuir Verni', 'Esclavage', …

  26. André Leal

    André Leal is a Brazilian tracer who mixes personages of comics with real people in its works. Through the participation of its friend Fernanda Breta as recurrent protagonist, which curiously is confused with a fictitious character, he has histories printed in diverse publications, also in magazine awardee Front, the periodical post Correio da Bahia and in the periodical A Tarde. -- External Link: http://bibifonfon.blogspot.com/ http://bibifonfon.blogspot.com/

  27. Scalp Pascal Scalp

    Scalp is a French Artist. photographer and film director.