Philip Bond

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Philip Bond
Born Philip John Bond
1966
Lancashire
Nationality British
Area(s) Penciller, Inker
Notable works
Kill Your Boyfriend
Vimanarama
philipbond.net

Philip J. Bond (born July 11, 1966 in Lancashire) is a British comic book artist, who first came to prominence in the late 1980s on Deadline magazine, and later through a number of collaborations with British writers for the DC Comics imprint Vertigo.

Biography

Early life, career and Deadline

Philip Bond was born in Lancashire, England in 1966, and is the son of a Preacher.[1] His earliest comics work came out of his being "active in the British alternative comics scene from 1987,"[2] and he writes on his website that, in 1988:

"I was sat on the floor of Jamie Hewlett and Alan Martin's single room flat pasting up the first issue of our self-published ATOMTAN magazine."[3]

Atomtan, Bond's first work, was a self-published fanzine created with Tank Girl creators Alan Martin and Jamie Hewlett, along with Luke Whitney and Jane Oliver. Bond's talent for comical, exaggerated anatomy and poses quickly led to professional work, mostly for now-defunct title Deadline, on strips such as Wired World.

This in turn led to Bond's inclusion in Atomeka Press star-studded anthology A1, with Bond contributing to issues No. 2 (with Hewlett) and No. 3 (in a story written and illustrated by Bond entitled "Endless Summer").

2000 AD and Vertigo

In 1990, he illustrated (and co-created) the Garth Ennis-scripted comedy series Time Flies for the leading British science-fiction comic, 2000 AD. In 1995, Bond was involved in the hype surrounding the release of the Tank Girl movie, illustrating a number of new Tank Girl strips for various publications. With Tank Girl and American reprints of Deadline raising his US popularity, and the DC Comics imprint Vertigo actively recruiting UK talent, Bond's skills were soon at work on American comics. Bond inked a Pre-Vertigo issue of Doom Patrol before co-penciling (with Glyn Dillon and Chris Bachalo) two issues of Shade, the Changing Man and then penciling and inking an issue himself (issue No. 48, June 1994). In 1995, Vertigo released a number of one shot issues under the collective title "Vertigo Voices," written by Vertigo's "most outspoken writers."[4] Bond illustrated (with additional inks by D'Israeli) Grant Morrison's offering: Kill Your Boyfriend.

Between November 1995 and January 1996, Bond inked Alan Grant's take on Tank Girl in Vertigo's Tank Girl: Apocalypse and worked on several issues of Morrison's The Invisibles in 1999/2000.[5] In 2000 he illustrated Jamie Delano's Hellblazer miniseries Bad Blood, and provided covers to the Ed Brubaker and Warren Pleece series Deadenders (2000–01).[6] He produced a handful of other miniseries and issues of various titles during the early 00s, including one of Morrison's most recent miniseries Vimanarama (2005). Bond says he was originally going to work on We3, but Morrison – with whom Bond has "an understanding because we both like what one another does" – "had this other idea that he thought I would be great for," leading to Bond illustrating Vimanarama, and Frank Quitely drawing We3.[7]

Other work

Over his career Bond has also illustrated comic strips for bands including the Smashing Pumpkins and Sum 41, as well as T-shirts for bands such as Cud.[8]

Most recently, Bond has focused his output on providing covers, rather than internal artwork. He has produced all covers (to date) for Simon Oliver and Tony Moore's The Exterminators, as well as a cover for Harvey Pekar's most recent American Splendor miniseries (all for Vertigo).

Bond has also worked at another DC Comics imprint, Wildstorm on Red Herring with David Tischman.[9]

Personal life

Around 1999/2000, Bond "got attached and then married to Shelly Roeberg, who is now Shelly Bond."[7] Roeberg, a key editor of DC Comics' Vertigo imprint titles, "had been coming over to the UK because she was the British liaison for Vertigo" after Karen Berger.[7] Attending UK conventions, "when she came over in 1999 [she and Bond] really hit it off."[7] Bond soon moved from the UK to New York City, and in 2004 the two had a son, Spencer.[10]

He lives with his wife and son in New Jersey.[11]

Bibliography

British comics

  • Atomtan (self-published) – 2 issues (1987–88)
  • Wired World (Deadline) – 34 issues (1988–93)
  • Hot Triggers (Deadline) – 13 issues (1989–93)
- plus numerous other short and one-off strips within the title.
  • The Crooked Mile (Crisis, 10 issues, 1989)
  • Circular Field (Deadline, 3 issues, 1989–90)
  • Time Flies (with Garth Ennis):
    • "Time Flies" (in 2000 AD #700–711, 1990)
    • "Tempus Fugitive" (in 2000 AD #1015–1023, 1996)
  • Tank Girl (8 issues, 1995)

American comics

Pencils and inks, unless otherwise stated:

Covers only

  • Vertigo: Winter's Edge #3 – 1998
  • Heartthrobs #3 (By Various) – 1999
  • Deadenders #1–16 (By Ed Brubaker and Warren Pleece) – 2000–01
  • Fallen Angel No. 14 (By Peter David and David Lopez) – 2004
  • The Exterminators #1-(#29) (By Simon Oliver and Tony Moore) – 2006–ON-GOING
  • American Splendor No. 1 (By Harvey Pekar et al.) – 2008

Others

Notes

  1. Art Bomb: Philip Bond profile. Accessed 6 June 2008
  2. Philip Bond at Lambiek's Comiclopedia. Accessed 6 June 2008
  3. PhilipBond.com November 20, 2000. Accessed 6 June 2008
  4. "Vertigo Voices" Promo Poster. Partial tagline.
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  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 UnderGround Online interview with Philip Bond by Daniel Robert Epstein c.2004. Accessed 6 June 2008
  8. The Cud Band – "Old News," April 25, 2001. Accessed 6 June 2008
  9. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  10. Philip Bond's blog – "it a picture of daddy," March 12, 2008. Accessed 6 June 2008
  11. Philip Bond's MySpace profile. Accessed 6 June 2008

References

External links

Interviews

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