
H.P. Lovecraft's 'The Colour Out of Space' – Amazing Stories 1927
Executed in bold pen-and-ink with heavy crosshatching and stark black-on-aged-paper contrast, this interior illustration captures the climactic horror of Lovecraft's story with expressionistic intensity. Two horrified observers peer through a multi-paned window at a writhing, phosphorescent entity erupting from a stone well, its tendrils coiling upward through blasted, alien-corrupted trees. The lower panel reveals grotesque, mutated creatures crouching in the blighted earth, rendered with scratchy, feverish linework that amplifies the cosmic dread.
A genuine artifact of Lovecraftian horror rendered at peak pulp intensity — the multi-panel composition, writhing alien entity erupting from a rural well, and feverish crosshatching deliver sustained cosmic dread that earns its place in any Golden Age anthology. It captures the ineffable with scratchy, committed linework that refuses to look away.
“The COLOUR OUT OF SPACE By H.P. Lovecraft ...and in the fearsome instant of deeper darkness, the watchers saw wriggling at that treetop height, a thousand tiny points of faint and unhallowed radiance, tipping each bough like the fire of St. Elmo...and all the while the shaft of phosphorescence from the well was getting brighter and brighter and bringing to the minds of the huddled men, a sense of doom and abnormality... It was no longer shining out; it was pouring out; and as the shapeless stream of unplaceable colour left the well, it seemed to flow directly into the sky. 556”





