Harry Bush was an American artist known for his homoerotic illustrations. Bush's meticulously detailed boy next door-style depictions of men made him one of the most notable artists of the era of beefcake magazines.
Bush served in the United States Navy and United States Air Force during the Second World War, having his first homosexual experience while deployed in the European theatre. Bush took up illustration as a pastime during the war; a self-trained artist, Bush took only one community college drawing class. Upon the conclusion of the war, he worked at the Pentagon until the early 1960s. Bush retired from military service at the age of 40, and relocated to Los Angeles, California.
In California, Bush's artwork was discovered by Bob Mizer, the founder of the Athletic Model Guild. In January 1966, Mizer published Bush's work for the first time in Physique Pictorial, making Bush the second artist after George Quaintance to be featured in the magazine. Works by Bush were additionally published in Mr. Sun, In Touch, Stroke, and Drummer. Bush continued to be published into the 1980s, as the erosion of obscenity laws allowed him to depict more explicit material in his work.
Bush was notoriously reclusive, and critical of what he perceived as the superficiality of the gay community. His isolation, combined with fears of copyright infringement, led him to destroy much of his original artwork. Bush remained closeted for the majority of his life due to a persistent fear that he would be outed and subsequently lose his veteran's pension; despite this, he never worked under a pseudonym, and signed all of his art with his own name.
Bush died in 1994 due to complications from emphysema. An anthology of his surviving works was published posthumously in 2007.
More...