Yōko Kondō (manga Artist)
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Japan Japan ( ja, 日本, or , and formally , ''Nihonkoku'') is an island country in East Asia. It is situated in the northwest Pacific Ocean, and is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan, while extending from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north ...
ese
manga artist A is a comic artist who writes and/or illustrates manga. As of 2006, about 3,000 professional manga artists were working in Japan. Most manga artists study at an art college or manga school or take on an apprenticeship with another artist be ...
. Beginning her career in 1979 in the alternative manga magazine ''Garo'', she is known for her historical and folklore-inspired works as well as for adaptations of classic Japanese literature.


Life

Kondō was born on May 11, 1957 in Niigata. She started being interested in manga after reading Sanpei Shirato's ''Kamui Gaiden'' and started drawing by imitating his style. In highschool, she met Rumiko Takahashi and together they founded a manga club at their school. Kondō supported Takahashi in the beginnings of her trying to start a career as a manga artist. She was also interested in folklore, influenced by the works of Shinobu Orikuchi, which is why she studied folklore at Kokugakuin University in Tokyo after finishing high school. In her last year at university in 1979 she published her first work as a professional manga artist in the alternative manga magazine '' Garo'', the short story "Monorōgu". She was an active contributor to several '' gekiga'' magazines after this and profited from the boom in erotic ''gekiga'' publications such as ''Gekiga Alice''. Together with other female artists who worked for erotic magazines for men such as
Kyoko Okazaki is a Japanese manga artist. Okazaki often focuses on urban Japanese life in Tokyo from the 1980s and 1990s. Okazaki's characters are bold and freewheeling, holding unconventional sets of values. Her writings are often studded with modern jargon ...
, Erica Sakurazawa and Shungicu Uchida, she is sometimes referred to as "onna no ko H mangaka" ("women H cartoonists"). She also worked as an assistant for manga artist
Murasaki Yamada , born as Mitsuko Shiratori, was a Japanese manga artist, feminist essayist and poet. She was associated with the alternative manga magazine ''Garo''. Life She made her debut as a professional manga artist in 1969 in Osamu Tezuka's avantgarde m ...
. In 1984, when the boom of erotic ''gekiga'' was subsiding, she was approached by the editors of ''
Weekly Manga Sunday , also known by the nickname , is a defunct Japanese weekly ''seinen'' manga magazine published by Jitsugyo no Nihon Sha. It started to be published under the name in 1959. On June 5, 2012, it start to be published twice in a month and the "Wee ...
'' to publish in the magazine. This led her to publish short stories about the daily life of neighbors in a quarter of Niigata in the magazine from 1984 until 1985. The ensuing short story collection ''Miharashi ga oka nite'' was a success and she won the excellence award at the
Japan Cartoonists Association Award is an annual award for manga, sponsored by the Japan Cartoonists Association. The prize was first awarded in 1972. Prizes Recipients of the Grand Prize receive a gold plaque, a medal, and a cash prize of ¥500,000. Recipients of the Excellence P ...
1986 for it. She kept publishing manga with similar daily life themes for several years. She was working for magazines in different age- and gender-specific publishing categories of the Japanese manga industry; for ''shōjo'' manga magazines like ''Asuka'', ''seinen'' manga magazines like '' Big Comic'' and ''josei'' manga magazines like '' Feel Young''. After this, she shifted towards adaptations of classic Japanese literature, among them works of Shinobu Orikuchi, Natsume Sōseki and Ango Sakaguchi. Several of these literature adaptations were published in the manga magazine ''
Comic Beam is a Japanese seinen manga magazine published by Enterbrain on a monthly basis since November 1995. In 2006, it had a circulation of 25,000. Popular manga serialized in ''Comic Beam'' include Kaoru Mori's '' Emma'' about the love story between ...
''.


Reception

Her early work for ''Garo'' received scholarly attention for bringing female perspectives into alternative manga. Together with Murasaki Yamada and Hinako Sugiura, who also worked as an assistant for Yamada, she was referred to as "three ''Garo'' girls" (ガロ三人娘 ''Garo san'nin musume''), translated by Ryan Holmberg (translator of Murasaki Yamada's '' Talk to My Back'') as "three daughters of ''Garo''". Holmberg argued that the moniker was "highly misleading", and that while male artists were not usually distinguished by gender, the moniker does so for the female artists. Holmberg argued that, therefore, the moniker displays sexism.Holmberg, ''Talk to My Back'', p. xxxviii. Besides the Excellence Prize at the Japan Cartoonists Association Award that she received in 1986 for ''Miharashi ga oka nite'', she won the Grand Prize at the Japan Media Arts Festival 2014 for her adaptation of Yasumi Tsuhara's fantasy novel ''Goshiki no Fune''. The jury commented: "We cannot help but admire KONDO’s sincerity and creativity when she addressed issues. This masterpiece, praised unanimously by its readers for its beauty in staunchly portraying the cruelty concealed in the world while at the same time providing the humor and courage to live, compels us to give something back." Her manga ''Sensō to Hitori no Onna'', based on a novel by Ango Sakaguchi, was among the jury-selected works of Japan Media Arts Festival 2013. She has been nominated twice for the
Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize Named after Osamu Tezuka, the is a yearly manga prize awarded to manga artists or their works that follow the Osamu Tezuka manga approach founded and sponsored by Asahi Shimbun. The prize has been awarded since 1997, in Tokyo, Japan. Current ...
; once in 2005 for a re-edition of her 1980s series ''Suikyō Kitan'' and once in 2022 for her series ''Takaoka Shinnō Kōkaiki''. Several of her manga have been adapted for film or television. Her manga series ''Roommates'' was adapted into a live-action TV series in 1996. An adaptation of her ''Ani Kaeru'' was released as a TV drama in 2009. In the late 2010s, some of her works were translated into French, Italian and Spanish.


Works


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Kondo, Yoko 1957 births Japanese female comics artists Japanese women writers Living people Women manga artists Manga artists from Niigata Prefecture People from Niigata Prefecture