Welcome everyone. We are getting the posts ready, but in the meantime, a couple of us did some BPRD sketches for you. Evan Bryce's Ben Daimio Andy Black's Liz Sherman Mike Ransom Getty's Abe Sapien We have a bunch of sketches coming your way by a great group of folks. Please stop by for more. Thanks!
A graduate from SCAD in 2007, Mike has worked for Devil's Due Publishing, and Marvel Comics. Living in the state of Vermont, he can usually be found at the drawing table during the 3 hours of daylight. He enjoys shorter walks on the beach and snowflakes.
Rebekah Isaacs
Rebekah graduated from SCAD in 2005 and after teaching English/eating unspeakable amounts in Japan for a year, got her first comics work with Devil's Due. In 2008 she got her first mainstream gig with Ms. Marvel #38 and is now drawing the upcoming DV8 reboot for WildStorm, written by Brian Wood. She lives in NYC with her imaginary cat and her real boyfriend Jon.
Patric Reynolds
Patric is a recovering Las Vegas high school teacher. With little more than a creaky futon, some Journey cassettes, and a childhood dream, he left it all to go draw comics. Two years later he graduated from SCAD's Graduate Sequential Art program in 2009, having published work for Dark Horse Comics' Myspace Presents #23, HellBoy: the Wild Hunt #7 (back up story), and Abe Sapien: the Haunted Boy. Nowdays he is working on a Serenity one shot, also for Dark Horse. He currently sleeps on a bed in Utah with vintage 1980 Empire Strikes Back sheets.
Andy P Black
After graduating from SCAD in 2007, Andy began work as a freelance artist. With projects varying from medical illustration, to work for Devil's Due Publishing, 5finity Publishing, and illustrations for television have kept him busy. He still lives in Savannah, GA with his fiance and a more than rambunctious cat.
Evan Bryce
Evan is a High School Drawing II teacher from Texas by day, illustrator by mid-afternoon to early evening! During his time as a student at the University of North Texas, Evan began working on comics doing color flats (aka 'horrible torture') for a book at Speakeasy called The Hunger. What it taught him was his need for freedom, so after a lot of artistic experimentation, he worked on Negative Burn, Zuda, some anthology work, and pin-ups in Supermarket Cash Money Edition and Image books like Crimeland, Astounding Wolf-Man, and the final issue of Brit.
Commission Availability
This list let's you know who is currently open for commissions!
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