Lee Sullivan

Lee Sullivan is a comic artist best known for his work on various Doctor Who related titles over the years, and also for his work on 2000 AD. He was actually inspired to go into comics by the launch of Doctor Who Weekly in 1979, but was put off when fellow artist David Lloyd told him what the pay rates were, and became a freelance illustrator instead. He eventually began working for Marvel UK in 1987 after being lured back into comics when working on a comics project for a music magazine with John Higgins, and he contributed several covers to Marvel's Transformers titles before getting his big break illustrating a strip written by John Freeman for Doctor Who Magazine, for which he has continued to work semi-regularly since 1988. His association with The Doctor has also gone beyond the pages of DWM, with work on Doctor Who-Battles in Time (a total of 64 strips between 2006 and 2009) as well as artwork for various BBC Doctor Who webcasts including Death Comes to Time, Real Time and Shada, artwork for the official BBC Doctor Who website, work for the Doctor Who DVD Files and for the American Doctor Who comics by IDW, and even the eighth Doctor comic strip which appeared in the Radio Times in 1996. Away from the Whoniverse, his 2000 AD work includes Vector 13, Black Light, Mercy Heights, Judge Dredd and (inevitably) Tharg's Future Shocks, while other titles he has contributed to include Death's Head, ThunxderCats and RoboCop for Marvel UK, TekWorld for Epic comics, and even Thunderbirds. He really should be a lot better known.

When he's not drawing, Sullivan plays the saxophone and regularly tours the UK as part of a Roxy Music tribute band called Roxy Magic.

The address of his website may be cunningly hidden in the image below...