
J. Allen St. John's Planetary Hero Running Amid Oriental Ruins, c.1910s-1920s
A reader of the early pulp era would have felt their pulse quicken at this breathless scene: a bare-chested, sword-armed planetary hero sprints across ancient stonework beneath a sky heavy with drama, exotic pagoda-like structures looming in the misty background. The dynamic foreshortening and urgent forward momentum embody the Edgar Rice Burroughs school of adventure — a lone earthman in a strange world, armed and dangerous, racing toward some desperate destiny. The charcoal-and-graphite draftsmanship is masterful, full of kinetic energy.
St. John's restrained but masterful draftsmanship elevates this above raw pulp sensationalism — it belongs in a museum of American illustration. Still, the half-naked swordsman in full sprint gives it enough primal adventure energy to earn its place on any Burroughs fan's wall.
“J Allen St. John...”





