Ward began to produce strips (King) for both the British and American magazines from about 1976. In Britain these appeared in
Him and
Zipper magazines under the editorship of Alex McKenna, as well as
Sam and
Daddy. It was his work for the American magazines
Manifest Reader,
Stroke and
Drummer that made him well known. Apart from King, his characters included the muscular sexual adventurer Drum, a clueless comic character Zeke and Rogan a space cop, as well as illustrations to John Embry's story The Exchange (writing under the pseudonym Robert Payne). His work features in the same issue of
Drummer that includes
Robert Mapplethorpe's first commissioned cover (issue 24, September 1978) under the editorship of
Jack Fritscher. Collections were published by Alternate Publishing in
San Francisco (
The Adventures of Drum,
The Fantastic Adventures of Bill Ward) and under the
Meatmen imprint of
gay comics. The artist was in regular contact with others in the field: he corresponded with
Al Shapiro ("A. Jay") arts editor at
Drummer,
Bill Schmeling ("The Hun") and
Harry Bush. The artist
Rex met him and was an admirer, owning work by Ward. In 1986, Ward was featured in
Naked Eyes, an artist showcase organized by
Olaf Odegaard that highlighted gay men's visual art for the International Gay and Lesbian Archives. In the 1990s, now living in Stratford with his then-partner Christie's silver expert Stephen Helliwell, both were diagnosed with
AIDS and died within a few months of each other in 1996.
Legacy Ward lost the majority of his original drawings for American strips for
Drummer during a change of ownership. He tried, with the help of John Embry to have them returned but failed. Some of his work remained with his "dowager partner" Brian Rawlinson in a space he used for drawing but eventually the studio (at Linden Gardens), filled with piles of magazines and detritus, needed clearing. With no idea what to do with the explicit drawings he had been left, Rawlinson's houseclearers were due put them in the same skip as the rest of the contents. Fortunately Bill's model for his character Drum, Robert Bremner (1947-2003), a fellow member with Bill of the London MSC leather club heard about it with only a day to spare. With Rawlinson's blessing and the help of artist Guy Burch, they sifted the material to extract an archive of work and related ephemera. Bremner also died of AIDS but the works were kept together by Burch but the explicit nature of many drawings made display or publication difficult. Burch supplied information for ‘Comics Unmasked, Art and Anarchy in the UK' at the British Library, which featured him as one of two British gay erotic comic illustrators. Ward's work was included in 'Model Men', an exhibition commemorating the 50th anniversary of the
1967 Sexual Offences Act in 2017. The Japanese Manga artist
Gengoroh Tagame cites Ward as an influence. The bulk of his surviving the work from the archive is now held by the
Bishopsgate Institute in conjunction with the
Queer Britain Museum. The
Leather Archives and Museum in Chicago, the
Tom Of Finland Foundation, The Collection of Male Art (Tazmania) and the
Australian Queer Archives also hold works. ==See also==