Underground comic artist Jim Osborne moved from San Antonio, Texas to San Francisco in 1967, at the dawn of the underground comix era. His first work, 'Okay, Mister K' was published in Yellow Dog #5... Read full biography
Underground comic artist Jim Osborne moved from San Antonio, Texas to San Francisco in 1967, at the dawn of the underground comix era. His first work, 'Okay, Mister K' was published in Yellow Dog #5 in 1968, followed by many more stories over the next few years in underground publications like... Read full biography
Underground comic artist Jim Osborne moved from San Antonio, Texas to San Francisco in 1967, at the dawn of the underground comix era. His first work, 'Okay, Mister K' was published in Yellow Dog #5 in 1968, followed by many more stories over the next few years in underground publications like Bijou, All Stars, Illuminations, Insect Fear, Promethean Enterprises, Slow Death, and Felch Cumics. During his brief comics career from 1968 to the mid-1970s, Jim Osborne's work was inspired by his... Read full biography
Underground comic artist Jim Osborne moved from San Antonio, Texas to San Francisco in 1967, at the dawn of the underground comix era. His first work, 'Okay, Mister K' was published in Yellow Dog #5 in 1968, followed by many more stories over the next few years in underground publications like Bijou, All Stars, Illuminations, Insect Fear, Promethean Enterprises, Slow Death, and Felch Cumics. During his brief comics career from 1968 to the mid-1970s, Jim Osborne's work was inspired by his fascination with crime and the occult and his meticulous attention to gruesome detail. Although most of Jim Osborne's work is long out of print, D.O.A. Comics, published by Keith Green in 1976, collected many of his stories from earlier comic books. The... Read full biography
Underground comic artist Jim Osborne moved from San Antonio, Texas to San Francisco in 1967, at the dawn of the underground comix era. His first work, 'Okay, Mister K' was published in Yellow Dog #5 in 1968, followed by many more stories over the next few years in underground publications like Bijou, All Stars, Illuminations, Insect Fear, Promethean Enterprises, Slow Death, and Felch Cumics. During his brief comics career from 1968 to the mid-1970s, Jim Osborne's work was inspired by his fascination with crime and the occult and his meticulous attention to gruesome detail. Although most of Jim Osborne's work is long out of print, D.O.A. Comics, published by Keith Green in 1976, collected many of his stories from earlier comic books. The comics anthology, "The Best of Bijou / Apex Treasury of Underground Comics," features... Read full biography
Jim Osborne - Artist Info
About Jim Osborne: Books
Books & Publications (1)
Publications based on askART research. List may not be comprehensive.
The Artists Bluebook 34,000 North American Artists to March 2005
2005
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