When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Category:Women manga artists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Women_manga_artists

    M. Miyako Maki; Sanami Matoh; Nina Matsumoto; Temari Matsumoto; Tomo Matsumoto; Akemi Matsunae; Mitsukazu Mihara; Kanan Minami; Haruka Minami (manga artist) Maki Minami

  3. Rumiko Takahashi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rumiko_Takahashi

    Rumiko Takahashi (高橋 留美子, Takahashi Rumiko, born October 10, 1957) is a Japanese manga artist.With a career of several commercially successful works, beginning with Urusei Yatsura in 1978, she is one of Japan's best-known and wealthiest manga artists.

  4. Hideko Mizuno - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hideko_Mizuno

    Hideko Mizuno (水野英子, Mizuno Hideko, born 29 October 1939 in Shimonoseki, Yamaguchi, Japan) is one of the first successful female Japanese shōjo manga artists. [1] She was an assistant of Osamu Tezuka staying in Tokiwa-sō. She made her professional debut in 1955 with Akakke Kōma Pony, a Western story with a tomboy heroine.

  5. List of female comics creators - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_female_comics_creators

    Alice Marble – associate editor on Wonder Woman 1941–1945, creator/writer of Wonder Women of History feature 1942–1946; Lee Marrs – worked for Star Reach; Elizabeth Holloway Marston – co-creator of Wonder Woman; Tarpe Mills, pseudonym of June Mills – Cat-Man (Holyoke Comics), Miss Fury; Jackie Ormes – Torchy Brown, Patty-Jo 'n' Ginger

  6. Year 24 Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Year_24_Group

    Moto Hagio, one of the primary artists associated with the Year 24 Group. The Year 24 Group (Japanese: 24年組, Hepburn: Nijūyo-nen Gumi) [a] is a grouping of female manga artists who heavily influenced shōjo manga (Japanese girls' comics) beginning in the 1970s.

  7. List of manga artists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_manga_artists

    Mihona Fujii (藤井 みほな); Rino Fujii (藤井理乃) (Creator of Happiness!; Tatsuki Fujimoto (藤本 タツキ) (Creator of Chainsaw Man); Ryu Fujisaki (藤崎 竜); Tooru Fujisawa (藤沢 とおる) (Creator of Great Teacher Onizuka)

  8. Josei manga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josei_manga

    By the late 1960s, gekiga was a mainstream artistic movement, and in 1968, the women's magazine Josei Seven published the first gekiga manga aimed at a female audience: Mashūko Banka (摩周湖晩夏) by Miyako Maki. [8] Maki was a shōjo manga artist who debuted in the late 1950s and pivoted to gekiga as her original audience aged into ...

  9. Clamp (manga artists) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clamp_(manga_artists)

    Clamp (stylized in all caps) is an all-female Japanese manga artist group, consisting of leader and writer Nanase Ohkawa (born in Osaka), and three artists whose roles shift for each series: Mokona, Tsubaki Nekoi, and Satsuki Igarashi (all born in Kyoto).