10 Mildly interesting Questions for Matt Boyce
Artist extraordinaire Matt Boyce took time out to kindly answer our Mildly Interesting Questions ahead of his appearance at the Catford Comic and Zine Fair.
CCZF: Hi Matt, what are you doing right now?
MB: Drinking a cup of tea and I’ve just finished off a big bag of Hazelnut Party Wafers.
CCZF: You my friend have got it sorted.
How long have you been doing comics and art and stuff?
MB: Since I was very small. I used to make these little books and get my Mum to bind them on her sewing machine. I started making and selling Zines at Comic shows when I was 12 (around 1992) and I have been doing it on and off since then.
CCZF: In order of preference, what are your three favourite soups? We are compiling a chart.
MB: One-Batchelors Golden Vegetable Cup-a-Soup,
Two-Batchelors Minestrone Cup-a-Soup (with Croutons)
Three-Batchelors Creamy Potato And Leek Cup-a-Soup
CCZF: Top quality. Batchelors do provide the best range of cup based soups.
What are you reading and listening to at the moment?
MB: I recently read Old Farts by Sorina Vazelina ,worth checking out Sorian is brilliant.
I need to catch up with One Punch Man
Working my way through Master Keaton by Naoki Urasawa. It’s Ace like a bonkers mash-up of Inspector Morse, Indiana Jones and the Borne Identity.
CCZF: They certainly are having good time.
You recently travelled to Prague for the Frame Festival. How was that?
MB: It was interesting, Lots of fun! Prague is pretty. Hope we get to go back next year for Frame 2018!
CCZF: You grew up in a deaf house hold. How has this effected your work and your ways of telling stories?
MB: I’m sure it has had an effect but it makes my brain hurt thinking about it. My Dad is a builder and he is always drawing pictures and diagrams to communicate with people. I’ve been drawing pictures and stories for as long as I can remember.
Sign language is a visual language so it must of done something to my brain which aids drawing comics!
Am I making sense or do I sound like a madman?
CCZF: You were a bit loopy to begin with Matt, but you’re making complete sense.
CCZF: Will there be a sequel?
MB: Not sure, I’ve been playing with the idea of doing something in the same world, I’m very wary of repeating myself.
CCZF: Somethings are worth repeating.
Christmas is a coming.
What was your favourite Christmas present when you were a kid?
I always coveted Big Track. The programmable electrical vehicle. Possibly for use on the moon. Never got one.
Stan had a big play mobile crane once. Pretty cool.
MB: Christmas 1989 we got an Amiga 500!
It was amazing, I wanted something to play computers games on but It came with Deluxe Paint 2 which meant I could draw crazy pictures, I then started using it too make my own fanzines which I would print on the school photocopier!
My Great Grandmother would give us interesting presents, they were normally whatever free gift she got with Readers Digest that month. One year I got a cake knife, another year a set of serviette holders.
My favourite was a book of the Greatest Disasters, it was full of gruesome pictures of Railway crashes, blimps on fire and Landslides!
CCZF: Thanks Gran.
If you had to recommend a comic/graphic novel/zine for a 11 year old what would it be?
MB: Bone by Jeff Smith was very important to me when I was 11.
I was also really into comics drawn by Simon Bisley, like ABC Warriors and Slaine.
There was a copy of Barefoot Gen by Keiji Nakazawa in my School library i read that and it blew my mind and gave me nightmares!
CCZF: That explains a lot Matt. An awful lot.
What are you working on at the moment?
MB: I’m trying to work out what to do next, I’d like to paint some really big pictures. I haven’t done that in a long time.
CCZF: Nice.
What advice would you give to somebody starting out in comics?
MB: Keep a sketchbook & Pen with you all the time, draw in it every day.
CCZF: Do you know how to get to the Blythe Hill Tavern?
MB: Yes