Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox comics creator Template:Nihongo is a Japanese manga artist, illustrator, and musician. He is noted for his early career in gay manga, as the lead singer of the kayōkyoku group Tomari, and for his 2013 award-winning manga series Template:Nihongo.
Biography
Yamada was born in 1972 in Toyonaka, Osaka Prefecture.[1][2] He began drawing manga in the fourth grade, and developed an interest the history of post-occupation Japan before studying at the Osaka University of Arts.[2] Yamada cites among his early influences the films of Shoichi Ozawa;[3] left-wing literary works by Template:Ill, Miyoko Matsutani, Akiyuki Nosaka, and Komimasa Tanaka;[4][3] historic news photography published by Mainichi Shimbun;[1] Fujio Akatsuka's Introduction to Manga;[2] and the television series Ōedo Sōsamō.[4]
In 1991, Yamada made his debut as a manga artist, writing and illustrating a dōjinshi about comfort women.[2] In 1994, he began to publish professionally as a gay manga artist, appearing in the gay interest magazines Template:Ill and Samson.[1] Yamada would become a regular contributor to both magazines, and was the exclusive cover illustrator for Samson in 2005.[5] In 2010, Yamada contributed artwork to "FACE TO REAL", an art series organized to raise awareness of HIV/AIDS in Japan.[6]
Areyo Hoshikuzu, Yamada's first long-form manga series created for a general audience, was serialized in Comic Beam from 2013 to 2018. The series, which follows two veterans of the Imperial Japanese Army in the aftermath of World War II, received widespread critical acclaim, winning a Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize[7] and the Grand Prize at the Japan Cartoonists Association Awards.[8]
In 2015, his manga series Nippon Night Pillow (Template:Lang) began serialization in Comic Beam.[1]
In addition to his manga work, Yamada is a kayōkyoku musician. He is the lead singer of the musical duo Tomari, with Atsuhiko Takemura. The group has released two albums through P-Vine Records: Template:Nihongo in 2010, and Template:Nihongo3 in 2014.[9]
References
External links
Template:Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize Template:Gay manga Template:Authority control
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