Tula Lotay

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Tula Lotay
Tula Lotay at the 2015 San Diego Comic-Con
BornLisa Wood
West Yorkshire, U.K.
NationalityBritish
Area(s)Artist
Notable works
Supreme: Blue Rose
Thought Bubble Festival
AwardsBob Clampett Humanitarian Award (2019)
tulalotay.com

Tula Lotay is the pen name of Lisa Wood, an English comic book artist.[1] She is known for illustrating Supreme: Blue Rose, written by Warren Ellis for Image Comics,[2][3] and for founding the Thought Bubble Festival, the UK's largest comics convention.[4] She was also an artist for Si Spencer's eight-part series Bodies, published by Vertigo.[5]

Biography

Lotay grew up in Batley, West Yorkshire.[6] She was adopted[citation needed] when she was a young child and had dyslexia.[6] She attended Dewsbury College and the University of Bradford.[6]

In 2007, while an employee of the local comics and board game retailer Travelling Man,[7] she founded the annual Thought Bubble Festival to promote comic books to the general public, especially children with reading difficulties.[5][6] Before becoming a comics artist, she was on the British Comic Awards Committee but resigned in 2013 to pursue a full-time art career.[citation needed]

Her first work was the cover art for Elephantmen #5 (2012), and in American Vampire: Anthology #1 (2013). She has also contributed to Red Sonja.[2]

Tula Lotay at the 2022 WonderCon in Anaheim, California.
Lotay at WonderCon 2022

She illustrated issue #13 of The Wicked + The Divine, which was published in 2015[2] and nominated for a GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Comic Book.[8]

Lotay and her Supreme collaborator Warren Ellis announced in 2015 that they were working on a new comic, Heartless. As of early 2018, Heartless has yet to be released, but work was in progress.[9]

In early 2022, Lotay stepped down as manager of the Thought Bubble Festival in order to concentrate on her art career and family.[7]

Awards

In 2019, in recognition for her work in creating the Thought Bubble Festival, Lotay was awarded the Bob Clampett Humanitarian Award [10][11] at the San Diego Comic-Con Eisner Awards. Upon receiving the award, Lotay said:

"It’s such an honour to be awarded the Bob Clampett Award by Comic-Con International. Although given in my name, this award is really for everyone who works tirelessly to make Thought Bubble what it is; a lot of whom are volunteers, who work so hard for the love of the medium of comics. I feel I’m accepting this award on behalf of them. For Clark, Martha, Bis, Amy, Steve, Pete, Nabil, Mikey, Chloe and Billie, and the hundreds of volunteers, exhibitors and guests who’ve supported us over the years and helped make the show what it is. We are so excited to continue our outreach programme and make it bigger and better than ever."[12]

Bibliography

Interior art

DC Comics/Vertigo Comics

  • All Star Batman #7 (2017)
  • American Vampire: Anthology #1 (2013)
  • Bodies #1-8 (2014)
  • The Witching Hour: One Shot (2013)

Dynamite Entertainment

  • Legends of Red Sonja #3 (2014)

Image Comics

  • Elephantmen #45 (2012)
  • Supreme: Blue Rose #1-7 (2014)
  • Thought Bubble Anthology #1: The Hound (2011)
  • Thought Bubble Anthology #2: A Significant Portraiture (2012)
  • The Wicked + The Divine #13 (2015)
  • Zero #18 (2015)

Marvel Comics

Comixology Originals

  • Barnstormers: A Ballad of Love and Murder #1-Present (2022- )

Cover art

Archie Comics

  • Archie: Volume 2 #17C (2017)
  • Betty & Veronica #1O (2016)
  • Josie and the Pussycats #2C (2016)
  • Jughead: Volume 3 #12C

Boom! Studios

  • Curb Stomp #1A (2015)
  • Fiction #1C (2015)
  • Grass Kings #4B (2017)
  • Joyride #1B (2016)
  • Mighty Morphin Power Rangers #3E (2016)

Dark Horse Comics

  • Briggs Land #1-6 (2016)
  • Briggs Land #3B NYCC Exclusive (2016)
  • Rebels #1-10 (2015 -2016)
  • Tomb Raider:Volume 3 #7-12 (2016-2017)
  • Night of the Ghoul #1B (2022)

Darryl Makes Comics

  • DMC #1.5 Thought Bubble 2nd Print Variant (2015)

DC Comics/Vertigo

  • All Star Batman #7A, #7C (2017)
  • Black Canary: Volume 4 #1B (2015)
  • Everafter: From the pages of Fables #1-10 (2016–17)
  • Hellblazer #11 - 12A (2017)
  • Shade the Changing Girl #1B
  • Slash and Burn #1-6 (2015 -2016)
  • The Wildstorm #1B (2017)

Dynamite Entertainment

  • Blackcross #1B, #2A-6A Regular Covers (2015)
  • Blackcross #1M, #2E-6E Virgin Art Covers (2015)
  • Dejah Thoris #1C (2016)
  • James Bond: Moneypenny #1A (2017)
  • Miss Fury #1A-5A Regular Covers (2016)
  • Miss Fury #1E-2E Virgin Art Covers (2016)
  • Red Sonja: Volume 3 #1C (2016)
  • Swords of Sorrow #1F, 2A-6A Regular Covers (2015)
  • Swords of Sorrow #1Q, 2D-6D Virgin Art Covers (2015)
  • Vampirella: Volume 4 #1C (2016)

Great Beast

  • Blood Blokes #3 Rear Cover (2013)

IDW Publishing

  • Archangel #1-5 (2016-2017)
  • Jem and the Holograms #7C (2015)

Image Comics

  • Codename Baboushka: Conclave of Death #1B
  • Elephantmen #29 Flip Cover (2010), #54 (2013)
  • Intersect #3B
  • Southern Cross #1C Ghost Variant (2016)
  • Supreme: Blue Rose #1-7 (2014)
  • Supreme: Blue Rose #1 Travelling Man Exclusive (2014)
  • Supreme: Blue Rose #1 SDCC Exclusive (2014)
  • Wayward #14B (2016)
  • The Wicked +The Divine #13B (2015)
  • Zero #18A (2015)

Independent

  • North Bend #1B "Kickstarter Project" (2016)
  • Girl With No Name (2019)[13]
  • Legion M

Marvel Comics

  • The Amazing Spider-Man: Volume 4 #9E Women of Power Variant (2016)
  • Black Widow: Volume 7 #1C (2016)
  • Captain America: Sam Wilson #12B (2016)
  • Civil War II: Choosing Sides #6B (2016)
  • Gamora #1E (2016)
  • Guardians of the Galaxy: Volume 4 #16C (2017)
  • Star Wars: Han Solo #2C (2016)
  • Vision: Volume 3 #2C (2015)

Titan Books

  • Penny Dreadful #4A (2016)
  • Vikings #1E Fried Pie Variant (2016)
  • World War Tank Girl #2C (2017)

Valiant Comics

  • 4001 A.D. #1B-4B (2016)
  • Bloodshot Reborn #10E, #11D, #12D, #13C (2016)
  • Divinity II #2D, #4D (2016)
  • Faith: Volume 2 #2F (2016)

Art Books

  • Dirge
  • Pequod
  • Salome
  • Sequoia

References

  1. ^ . Image Comics https://imagecomics.com/creators/view/tula-lotay. Retrieved 27 March 2017. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. ^ a b c Kross, Karin L. (17 July 2015). ""Working in a Cupboard" — An Interview with Comic Artist Tula Lotay". Tor.com. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  3. ^ Wood, Lilith (5 March 2015). "State of the Art: Tula Lotay on Communicating Emotion and Confusion in Supreme: Blue Rose". Paste Magazine. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  4. ^ "Thought Bubble: Thousands of people in Leeds attend UK's largest comic book festival". Yorkshire Evening Post. Retrieved 17 October 2013.
  5. ^ a b "Leeds comic book queen is picture perfect". Yorkshire Evening Post. 14 August 2014. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  6. ^ a b c d Freeman, Sarah. "Bubble rap: How comic books changed our lives: Struggling to read as a child, Lisa Wood found escape through comic books. Now an artist, she tells Sarah Freeman about the Thought Bubble festival which is devoted to comic art," The Yorkshire Post (16 November 2014).
  7. ^ a b Lomax, Claire. "Ilkley comic artist Tula Lotay steps down from Thought Bubble convention," The Telegraph and Argus (3 Feb. 2022).
  8. ^ "Outstanding Comic Book". GLAAD Media Awards. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  9. ^ "The Image Comics Expo Announcements That Went Missing In Action, Lost And Found..." Bleeding Cool Comic Book, Movie, TV News. 13 May 2016. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
  10. ^ "Bob Clampett Humanitarian Award". 5 December 2012.
  11. ^ "Newsarama | GamesRadar+". 24 November 2023.
  12. ^ "Thought Bubble Founder, Lisa Wood, honoured with Humanitarian Award". 31 May 2019.
  13. ^ "Female Western 'Girl With No Name' in the Works". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 6 October 2018.

External links