In the past several years I have become involved with a local artist and his gallery and am grateful for his willingness to work with me on commission. I am no longer the sole designer and the commission of this piece is from him.
His work on the piece is amazing. The colors, the way he blends them, the textures, and the textures themselves are masterpieces. I have not worked with him on any pieces for some time, so I’m happy to be back in the same position.
I am very pleased to be working on this commission and I cannot say enough about what a pleasure it has been. I am also grateful that I was able to work with someone like this, someone who can be so direct and honest. I look forward to working with him again on future commissions.
As it turns out, not only does he work with a variety of artists on his commissions, but he also works with various musicians and comedians on his shows. He does not, however, discriminate by gender. He has a very active social media presence, too.
Like many other artists working in the comic book industry, he has been a part of the DC Comics community since the early 2000s. After this point, however, he has been a bit of an outlier. A majority of DC artists were male, and more often than not, these artists did not have many female artists on their team. On the other hand, the comics industry has always been male dominated, and more often than not, comics artists were female.
As a result, the DC Comics community has traditionally been one of the most male-dominated in the comic book industry. I have to admit that I was somewhat surprised to find out about this. In most cases, DC artists are either female or gay, which is quite a bit more common than the general comic book industry. It does lead one to wonder why so many people are so opposed to the idea of a DC artist being gay.
I think that there is something to be said for the fact that no comic has ever made it to the top of the sales charts without the support of a big name artist.
It’s not that DC just doesn’t like gay artists. No. It’s that it’s impossible for an artist to have large enough reach and talent to make it into the top tier without having a gay or lesbian comic book writer of some sort on the staff. If you can see how far you can come without having a gay comic book writer, you can achieve the same level of success without the gay comic book writer who doesn’t get in your way.
With DC comics I feel like you’re talking about a comic book that has a gay comic book writer. I’m not saying that your comic won’t have a gay comic book writer, I’m saying that you’re not talking about a gay comic book writer.
Its not that I don’t think there are gay comic book writers, I am well aware that there are. However, this is a comic book you’re dealing with, not a comic book. There are comics out there with gay comic book writers, but they are rare. I can say that I have personally had that kind of experience with some very talented gay comic book writers.