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Japanese manga artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tatsuki Fujimoto (Japanese: 藤本 タツキ, Hepburn: Fujimoto Tatsuki, born October 10, 1992, or 1993[a]) is a Japanese manga artist, known for his works Fire Punch and Chainsaw Man.
Tatsuki Fujimoto 藤本 タツキ | |
---|---|
Born |
Nikaho, Akita Prefecture, Japan |
Nationality | Japanese |
Area(s) | Manga artist |
Notable works | |
Awards |
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Fujimoto was born on October 10, 1992, or 1993,[a] in Nikaho, Akita Prefecture, Japan.[5] He started drawing at an early age. He had no preparatory schools available near his home, so he went to painting classes in which his grandparents attended and practiced oil painting.[8] He graduated in Western painting from Tohoku University of Art and Design in Yamagata, Yamagata Prefecture in 2014.[9]
In 2011, Fujimoto drew his first submitted one-shot work, A Couple Clucking Chickens Were Still Kickin' in the Schoolyard (庭には二羽ニワトリがいた, Niwa ni wa Niwa Niwatori ga ita), which was nominated for the December Jump SQ. Monthly Award[10][1] (it was later published on the Shōnen Jump+ online platform on July 17, 2017).[11][6] Fujimoto's one-shot, Seigi no Mikata (正義の見方, "Sense of Justice"), was an entry work for the 10th Supreme Comic Grand Prize season II in 2013.[12] His next one-shot work was Kami Hikōki (かみひこうき, "Paper Planes"), for which he won a Jury Special Award at the 3rd Shueisha's Crown Newcomers' Awards in 2013.[13] Fujimoto's next one-shot work was Sasaki Stopped a Bullet (佐々木くんが銃弾止めた, Sasaki-kun ga Juudan Tometa), for which he won his second Jury Special Award at the 5th Shueisha's Crown Newcomers' Awards in 2013[14] (later published on Shōnen Jump+ on June 13, 2016).[15]
Fujimoto's next work was Love is Blind (恋は盲目, Koi wa Mōmoku), for which he won an Honorable Mention Award at the November 2013 Shueisha's Crown Newcomers' Awards,[16][17] and was his first published work, being launched in Jump SQ.19 vol. 13 on April 19, 2014.[18] His next one-shot works were Shikaku (シカク), published in Jump SQ.19 vol. 14 on June 19, 2014;[19] Mermaid Rhapsody (人魚ラプソディ, Ningyo Rapusodi), published in Jump SQ.19 vol. 17 on December 19, 2014;[20] and Nayuta of the Prophecy (予言のナユタ, Yogen no Nayuta), published in Jump Square on July 4, 2015.[21]
Fujimoto published his first major and serialized work, Fire Punch (ファイアパンチ, Faia Panchi), on Shueisha's Shōnen Jump+ online magazine, where it ran from April 18, 2016, to January 1, 2018.[22][23][24] The series spawned eight tankōbon volumes.[25][26] Fujimoto also published on Shōnen Jump+ the one-shot Woke-Up-as-a-Girl Syndrome (目が覚めたら女の子になっていた病, Me ga Sametara Onnanoko ni Natteita Yamai) on April 24, 2017,[27] and the one-shot Sisters (妹の姉, Imōto no Ane) in the June 2018 issue of Jump Square on May 2, 2018.[28]
Fujimoto's second major serialized work, Chainsaw Man (チェンソーマン, Chensō Man), was published in Shueisha's Weekly Shōnen Jump from December 3, 2018, to December 14, 2020.[29][7] A second part started in Shōnen Jump+ on July 13, 2022.[30][31] Chainsaw Man topped Takarajimasha's Kono Manga ga Sugoi! list of best manga of 2021 for male readers,[32] and earned Fujimoto the 66th Shogakukan Manga Award for Best Shōnen Manga.[33][34][5] In 2021, the manga won the Harvey Awards for Best Manga;[35] it won the award for the second time in 2022;[36]and for the third time in 2023.[37]
Fujimoto illustrated the cover of the novels anthology 5-Minute Stories: An Unexpected End (5分で読める驚愕のラストの物語, Gofun de Yomeru Kyōgaku no Rasuto no Monogatari), released on April 2, 2021.[38] Fujimoto participated as a guest judge at Shonen Jump+'s Million Tag online reality show in July 2021.[39][40]
Fujimoto published the one-shot Look Back (ルックバック, Rukku Bakku) on Shōnen Jump+ on July 19, 2021.[41][42] The chapter was collected by Shueisha in a single tankōbon volume, released on September 3, 2021.[43] Look Back topped the Kono Manga ga Sugoi! 2022 list of best manga for male readers.[44]
A two-volume collection of Fujimoto's previous one-shots, Tatsuki Fujimoto Before Chainsaw Man (藤本タツキ短編集, Fujimoto Tatsuki Tanpenshū, "Tatsuki Fujimoto's Short Stories"), subtitled 17–21 and 22–26, were released on October 4 and November 4, 2021, respectively.[45][46] He illustrated the novel Chainsaw Man: Buddy Stories (チェンソーマン バディ・ストーリーズ, Chensō Man Badi Sutōrīzu),[47] published on November 4, 2021.[48][46] Fujimoto illustrated a version of one of the forty-two volumes of the Dragon Ball manga for the Dragon Ball Super Gallery Project, celebrating the series' 40th anniversary, which was published in Saikyō Jump on December 3, 2021.[49][50]
Fujimoto published Goodbye, Eri (さよなら絵梨, Sayonara Eri), a 200-page one-shot, on Shōnen Jump+ on April 11, 2022.[51][52] The chapter was collected by Shueisha in a single tankōbon volume, released on July 4, 2022.[53]
Along with illustrator Oto Tōda, Fujimoto published the one-shot Just Listen to the Song (フツーに聞いてくれ, Futsū ni Kiitekure, "Listen to Me Normally") on Shōnen Jump+ on July 4, 2022.[31]
Fujimoto commented that he wanted to "draw manga like Korean films", citing the 2008 South Korean film The Chaser as example, stating: "the main character chases after the villain, but thirty minutes into the movie, he catches him. This is supposed to happen at the end of the movie, so you keep wondering what will happen next. A lot of people say that in Korean movies they cannot tell what the director is thinking, but actually, if you watch until the end, you will get it. I wanted to make something like that."[54] He also mentioned the 2016 Japanese film Sadako vs. Kayako, Kōji Shiraishi's film series Senritsu Kaiki File Kowasugi! ,[55] the 2011 Indonesian film The Raid and Takeshi Kitano's work.[56] He was also influenced by manga authors Hiroaki Samura,[54] Hideki Arai,[55] and Tsutomu Nihei.[8]
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