Spanking art

Various artists, can you name the ones I can’t?

1) Who can name this artist?

2) Innuendo – does anyone know more about this artist? He’s new to me

3)  Philip Swarbric – as identified by Leather Strap – more art here

4) Alan
5) Who can tell us the name of this artist?

6) Who is this artist?
7) Jonathan

8) I believe this artist is Sean, am I right?

9) I doubt anyone here is old enough to identify this artist!! This engraving appeared in Latin text books at JockSpank visitor CP’s school and according to JockSpank visitor Stani is is based on a painting which can be seen at the National archeological museum in Napoli, Italy

10) Tom of Finland
11) Julius “Daddy Dearest” series – identified by Ian
12) Ken Beverley
13) Another by Ken Beverley

14) Franco

15) Mitchell
16) Spryte

11 Responses to Spanking art

  1. The ninth one down is from an old Latin textbook used in High School. I recall it and also recall how aroused I got (and had to conceal the tenting) when I turned the page and viewed this pic. It was captioned “Schoolboy Discipline” and no artist credit was given.

  2. Thanks Leather Strap, I have updated the posting

  3. Thanks CP, it looks to me as if it is from an engraving

  4. Bruce, No 11 is not Cavelo but a pic from a Julius series called Daddy Dearest.

  5. Where can I find more of the comic artist? the one with two boys coming on a paddle session…

  6. Bruce, that Schoolboy Discipline image is indeed from an engraving, you’re right on point. It accompanied the text that taught various phrases relating to school, including the sentence: ” magister ferula habent punio discipulus” or ‘the teacher has a rod to punish students’. It’s appropriate to note that the Latin for student is “one who is disciplined”.

    Actually, I found (via the school library back then) another version of that image. It would appear that the one you posted was a toned-down version, as the other one has exactly the same montage with the boy being flogged having a rounder and fuller butt. Perhaps some editor of educational texts imposed his own modesty upon the original image and had it airbrushed – or maybe it was the other way around!

  7. Friends, number nine is a drawing made after a painting to be seen at the National archeological museum in Napoli, Italy: An open school near a market place at Herculanum ( Ercolano) a city near Pompei that was doomed to be destroyed by the Vesuvio… As a French schoolboy ( some fourty years ago ) I often dreamed to be flogged in front of my class mates…Alas, it was never to be, so decadent is our education system!… Fortunately, Dad took care of me at home…

  8. Thanks Stani,

    I have updated the posting with that information

    Bruce

  9. Bruce, The original engraving was made in the 18th century and CP is right about later on more “modest” renditions, probably made in the 19th or early 20th…I remember reading a comic in “Spirou”, a French language teen publication when I was a boy: it was inspired by this drawing and showed a wonderfully alive, screaming and crying teen boy!.. This punishment position was called “catomidio” ( verb: “catomidiare” ) wich meant “carryed on someone’s back, i.e.: to be spanked…A common punishment for kids, gymnasts and soldiers, greeck tradition, surely…Stll used in many schools in europe in the 18th and as late as the early 19th in England!

  10. Bruce, The original engraving was made in the 18th century and CP is right about later on more “modest” renditions, probably made in the 19th or early 20th…I remember reading a comic in “Spirou”, a French language teen publication when I was a boy: it was inspired by this drawing and showed a wonderfully alive, screaming and crying teen boy!.. This punishment position was called “catomidio” ( verb: “catomidiare” ) wich meant “carryed on someone’s back, i.e.: to be spanked…A common punishment for kids, gymnasts and soldiers, greeck tradition, surely…Stll used in many schools in europe in the 18th and as late as the early 19th in England!