Brett Ewins

Brett Ewins
Born 1955 (age 56–57)
Nationality British
Area(s) Artist
Notable works Bad Company
Deadline
Official website

Brett Ewins is a British comic book artist best known for his work on Judge Dredd and Rogue Trooper in the weekly comic book 2000 AD.

Contents

Biography

Ewins studied Conceptual Art at Goldsmiths College, where he met future collaborator Peter Milligan, and left in 1977. Ewins formed a long-term collaborative partnership with fellow artist Brendan McCarthy, creating the comic Sometime Stories, which faltered after the first issue leaving the second issue completed but unpublished. On the strength of Sometime Stories, Ewins soon started providing covers for 2000 AD, the first being issue #33 published in October of the same year.

Ewins and McCarthy continued working together on Future Shocks and Judge Dredd, but soon after Ewins began working solo on Rogue Trooper and later Judge Anderson. In 1985 Ewins started working on Bad Company, a sci-war epic, written by Peter Milligan with artwork by Ewins and Jim McCarthy (brother of Brendan).

Along with Steve Dillon, he started the comic magazine Deadline in 1988, which continued for another seven years. At the same time as Ewins was starting Deadline, he began working on Skreemer for American comics publisher, DC. Ewins was also still contributing art to 2000 AD at the same time. This level of work was to have a serious impact of Ewins' health.

In 1991 Ewins "suffered a serious breakdown from overwork" and was unable to take on work that had a deadline, which led to lost commissions from DC Comics and Penguin Books.[1] His plan to recover was to create an anthology based on work from friends in the industry like Peter Milligan, Alan Grant and Alan McKenzie, as well as friends like musician Michael White. The volume was finished off with, "Machine," a story written by Brett based on his breakdown.[2] He worked on the stories from 1995 to 2003[1] and they were published in 2004 by Cyberosia Publishing.

Ewins currently paints and has had a number of exhibitions.

In 2011, Air Pirate Press published a biographical retrospective book of Ewins' life and work, "The Art of Brett Ewins".

Bibliography

Awards

Notes

  1. ^ a b Ewins, Brett "Introduction," The Dark Gate page 4-5
  2. ^ Ewins, Brett "Afterword," The Dark Gate page 62-63
  3. ^ Skreemer trade details at DC

References

External links