Ichiko Ima 今 市子 | |
---|---|
Born | April 11 Himi, Toyama, Japan |
Nationality | Japanese |
Area(s) | Manga artist |
Notable works | Hyakkiyakō Shō |
Awards | Excellency Award at Japanese Media Arts Festival 2006 for Hyakkiyakō Shō |
Ichiko Ima (今 市子, Ima Ichiko, born April 11 in Himi, Toyama, Japan) is a Japanese manga artist. She is most famous for her horror manga series Hyakkiyakō Shō. [1] [2] [3] [4]
She was born in rural Toyama Prefecture. Her grandmother would tell her scary stories before going to bed. She started reading manga through her sister, discovering Kazuo Umezu's horror manga and Masako Watanabe's Garasu no Shiro at an early age. She mostly read shōjo manga and came to appreciate Moto Hagio as her favorite artist. She started drawing manga in elementary school. In high school, she self-published her own Doujinshi. She graduated from Tokyo Woman's Christian University. At university she attended a manga club and learned techniques for drawing manga. After working as an assistant for other manga artists, she finally published her first work as a professional manga artist with the short story My Beautiful Green Palace in the magazine Comic Image in 1993. [5] [6]
She sold Doujinshi at the Comitia convention and the editor of what would become the horror manga magazine Nemuki discovered her work in a pile of unsold Doujinshi. In 1993, she published her first short story in a predecessor of the magazine, for which she would become a regular contributor. [5] Her biggest commercial and critical success is the series Hyakkiyakō Shō, which runs in Nemuki since 1995. The series has also been published by Asahi Sonorama in 30 volumes (as of January 2023), which have been sold more than 5.8 million times. [7] The series was awarded a Excellence Award at the Japan Media Arts Festival 2006 [2] and was nominated for the Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize in 2005. [8] [3] The first six volumes of the manga have been translated into French [9] and it is currently being published in Italian. [10] An English translation titled Beyond Twilight was announced by Aurora Publishing in 2010, but it was never released due to the publisher's closure.
She has also published several boys love manga. She regularly contributes to the boys love magazine Hana Oto since the 1990s. [5]
Category:Japanese female comics artists
Category:Female comics writers
Category:Women manga artists
Category:Living people
Category:Manga artists from Toyama Prefecture
Category:Japanese women writers
Category:Japanese horror writers
Category:Year of birth missing (living people)
Ichiko Ima 今 市子 | |
---|---|
Born | April 11 Himi, Toyama, Japan |
Nationality | Japanese |
Area(s) | Manga artist |
Notable works | Hyakkiyakō Shō |
Awards | Excellency Award at Japanese Media Arts Festival 2006 for Hyakkiyakō Shō |
Ichiko Ima (今 市子, Ima Ichiko, born April 11 in Himi, Toyama, Japan) is a Japanese manga artist. She is most famous for her horror manga series Hyakkiyakō Shō. [1] [2] [3] [4]
She was born in rural Toyama Prefecture. Her grandmother would tell her scary stories before going to bed. She started reading manga through her sister, discovering Kazuo Umezu's horror manga and Masako Watanabe's Garasu no Shiro at an early age. She mostly read shōjo manga and came to appreciate Moto Hagio as her favorite artist. She started drawing manga in elementary school. In high school, she self-published her own Doujinshi. She graduated from Tokyo Woman's Christian University. At university she attended a manga club and learned techniques for drawing manga. After working as an assistant for other manga artists, she finally published her first work as a professional manga artist with the short story My Beautiful Green Palace in the magazine Comic Image in 1993. [5] [6]
She sold Doujinshi at the Comitia convention and the editor of what would become the horror manga magazine Nemuki discovered her work in a pile of unsold Doujinshi. In 1993, she published her first short story in a predecessor of the magazine, for which she would become a regular contributor. [5] Her biggest commercial and critical success is the series Hyakkiyakō Shō, which runs in Nemuki since 1995. The series has also been published by Asahi Sonorama in 30 volumes (as of January 2023), which have been sold more than 5.8 million times. [7] The series was awarded a Excellence Award at the Japan Media Arts Festival 2006 [2] and was nominated for the Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize in 2005. [8] [3] The first six volumes of the manga have been translated into French [9] and it is currently being published in Italian. [10] An English translation titled Beyond Twilight was announced by Aurora Publishing in 2010, but it was never released due to the publisher's closure.
She has also published several boys love manga. She regularly contributes to the boys love magazine Hana Oto since the 1990s. [5]
Category:Japanese female comics artists
Category:Female comics writers
Category:Women manga artists
Category:Living people
Category:Manga artists from Toyama Prefecture
Category:Japanese women writers
Category:Japanese horror writers
Category:Year of birth missing (living people)