Margaret Brundage's 'A Witch Shall Be Born' – Weird Tales, Dec. 1934 — art by Margaret Brundage — Weird Tales — 1930s
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Margaret Brundage's 'A Witch Shall Be Born' – Weird Tales, Dec. 1934

Before you stands one of the most iconic — and controversial — covers from pulp fiction's golden age. Painted by Margaret Brundage, the only woman to regularly grace Weird Tales covers, this December 1934 image illustrates Robert E. Howard's Conan-adjacent tale 'A Witch Shall Be Born.' A dominatrix figure in a golden bikini top and flowing red skirt stands over a cowering woman on stone pavement, whip in hand — all rendered in Brundage's distinctive soft pastel-meets-oil style that consistently pushed the boundaries of 1930s newstand propriety.

Category: Magazine Cover
Publication: Weird Tales
Source: Internet Archive
Decade: 1930s
Country: United States
Coolness: 8/10

Brundage's soft, almost delicate pastel technique creates an odd tension with the overtly aggressive subject matter — the whip and power dynamic rendered with the aesthetic gentleness of a glamour portrait. The result is peak Weird Tales: simultaneously titillating, threatening, and strangely elegant.

Text in image:

DECEMBER, 1934 Weird Tales A WITCH SHALL BE BORN Dark Magic • Mad Passion Red Carnage By ROBERT E. HOWARD CLARK ASHTON SMITH BASSETT MORGAN C. L. MOORE DEC. 25c Vol. 24, No. 6—25c WEIRD TALES Printed in U.S.A.

Public domain. This vintage illustration is free of known copyright restrictions — free to download, share, and reuse for any purpose.

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