Avert your eyes! The eclipse is over, but this hideous Indianapolis house just might scar your retinas.

The monstrosity at 4923 Kessler Blvd. East Drive, known colloquially as the Kessler mansion, just hit the market . . . for the seventh time in five years. This go-around, it’s asking $1.75 million — arguably, a bit much for a house that’s been called the “unsellable” “ugliest house in America” for its “Midwestern Vegas Versailles” aesthetic.

The home, whose recent listing was first spotted by Curbed, is the bizarre brainchild of “almost-famous pimp-turned-construction mini-magnate” Jerry A. Hostetler, who died in 2006 at age 66. Police dubbed him the area’s “Mr. Big” after he pleaded guilty to pandering and running prostitutes. (The nickname worked on a few levels: He was 6-foot-2 and weighed as much as 500 pounds.)

Mr. Big started amassing his fittingly giant fiefdom in the 1960s, starting with a three-bedroom ranch and then buying up neighbors’ houses.

The 11-bedroom, seven-bathroom thing that resulted is undeniably repulsive: a mishmash of rough-hewn stone, glass blocks, rustic tile, wildly textured ceilings, shiny marble, round columns, oddly shaped windows of all geometric persuasions and senselessly undulating balconies. All that glorious home décor gone wrong is spread over a whopping 29,500 square feet.

Between 2012 and the present, [owner Chad] Folkening has listed it at least seven times, for $2.2 million at the highest and $875,000 at the lowest.

The house and 1.66-acre grounds contain statues of the following: women in various states of undress, dolphins, lions and, of course, gargoyles. Sadly, some previous standouts — a nymph fountain, a 6-foot-tall mermaid sculpture and a polar bear statue — were sold off to appease creditors.

The current owner is entrepreneur Chad Folkening, an Indiana native who has both lived there and rented it. Claim to fame: the Baha Men, of “Who Let the Dogs Out” notoriety, once crashed there for several weeks during a 2010 Midwest tour. (You can stay there, too: It’s on Airbnb for $450/night. Reviews mention squatters, broken windows and a mouse sighting.)

Between 2012 and the present, Folkening has listed the manse at least seven times, for $2.2 million at its highest and $875,000 at its lowest. As of Aug. 14, it’s officially ba-ack, with the $1.75 million price tag.

This week, Duke professor Gabriel Rosenberg, who is from Indianapolis, tweeted a series of photos from what he’s dubbed “the greatest real estate listing in human history” — with hilarious commentary. Highlights include “Welcome to your combination luxury mansion-dentist’s office” and some love for the aforementioned dolphin-adorned sculpture.

The place is such an offense to the eyes that one neighbor has reportedly planted trees to block the view. And it sticks out like a sore thumb in more ways than one: the median home value around the address is $202,450, according to Realtor.com.

The listing, repped by Joe Everhart of Everhart Studio, claims it can serve as a “family compound” and also rake in rental income from Airbnb.

Will it ever find a buyer? “Obviously,” a former broker for the Kessler Mansion once told the Indy Star, “it will take someone with a little personality who’s not afraid to be a little bit bold in their taste.”

You don’t say.