| Craig Bostick
Email: aquaboy@spoilsport.net
Website: Aquaboy Drawings & Design
Bio: Craig Bostick is an illustrator and graphic designer living in Boston. He has self-published comics about Fuchsia Galactica, Go-Go Girl and Darby Crash. He’s also done comics for anthologies including Boy Trouble, Pink Medicine and Last Cry For Help among others. His illustrations can be found in the book Bazaar Bizarre by Greg Der Ananian and many magazines. When he’s not drawing he plays in the band SpoilSport with his husband Jon. www.aquaboy.net
RECENT PRISM COMICS FEATURES
"MOM, I'M PREGNANT."
[Color Commentary, Posted 1/15/09]
No, wait. "I'm in trouble." That's the expression! "I'm. In. Trouble." A boy in trouble.
It might be a terrible joke, but don't let that stop you from clicking on the link above and reading about a gay comics anthology you'll want to own! APE, HARD HEROES AND WEHO BOOK FAIR PICTURES POSTED
[News, Posted 12/1/08]
The Prism folks have been busy over the summer and fall with bar events, book fairs and comic conventions. Pictures have finally been posted on Prism's Flickr page from HARD HEROES 2008, an annual fundraiser in Los Angeles. Super heroes and villains abounded along with creators Aman Chaudhary, Michael Derry, Scott Mullens, Brad Rader, Michael Troy and Sean-Z. Master face and body painter Bruce Collins and his team were busy turning sexy guys and gals into works of into sexy works of comic… PANEL DISCUSSION ON "TOUGH BOYS IN TROUBLE!" IN NYC
[News, Posted 1/30/07]
On Thursday, February 1st at 7pm, join Russ Turk, Rhino, Craig Bostick, J. Brett Hopkins, Tony Arena, Contributors to The Book of Boy Trouble comics anthology, and Abby Denson- creator of Tough Love at the LGBT Center in New York City for a panel discussion of gay themed comics from an alternative viewpoint.
“Is there an alternative point-of-view within the already-alternative world of gay comic books? The creative forces behind two of the hottest new gay-male themed comics… THE BOOK OF BOY TROUBLE
[Color Commentary, Posted 9/28/06]
In his introduction to The Book of Boy Trouble, Robert Kirby says that a zine (a self-published and usually photocopied work of limited distribution that appeals to roughly .01% of the population) can be made by anyone with pens, paper and a photocopier (or a graphics pad, stylus and printer for you high-tech folk). I can’t deny this assertion, though in my (admittedly limited) experience with zines, there is a difference between what one can do and what one should do. Lord knows I’ve seen… "NO STRAIGHT LINES: QUEER CULTURE AND THE COMICS"
[News, Posted 4/5/06]
San Francisco -- Over twenty cartoonists join forces at the San Francisco Cartoon Art Museum for "No Straight Lines: Queer Culture and the Comics," the first museum exhibition devoted entirely to LGBT comics!
"No Straight Lines" assembles some of today’s most influential and controversial cartoonists to explore an extraordinary range of topics, viewpoints, and artistic styles. The exhibition features everything from homicidal lesbian terrorists to campy superheroine trannies, from…
RECENT OFFSITE FEATURES
NO STRAIGHT LINES: QUEER CULTURE AND THE COMICS
[Source: Cartoon Art Museum, Added: 3/19/06]
More than twenty cartoonists join forces at the Cartoon Art Museum for No Straight Lines: Queer Culture and the Comics, the first museum exhibition devoted entirely to LGBT comics. No Straight Lines... |