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M. Miyako Maki; Sanami Matoh; Nina Matsumoto; Temari Matsumoto; Tomo Matsumoto; Akemi Matsunae; Mitsukazu Mihara; Kanan Minami; Haruka Minami (manga artist) Maki Minami
She quickly became the most popular female manga artist of her time. [ 1 ] She was noted in the 1960s for using pastel colors instead of the bright primary colors common at the time, and for pioneering both shōjo (written for teenage girls) horror stories with Blue Foxfire and shōjo mystery stories with Glass no Shiro ( Glass Castle ). [ 1 ]
Mikiyo Tsuda (つだみきよ) also writes yaoi under the name Taishi Zaō (蔵王大志 Zaō Taishi) (Creator of Princess Princess) Yoshiharu Tsuge (つげ 義春) Yumi Tsukirino (つきりの ゆみ) Sakura Tsukuba (筑波 さくら) (Creator of Penguin Revolution) Taku Tsumugi; Yūko Tsuno (津野 裕子) Jirō Tsunoda (つのだ じろう)
Chigusa Kitani (1895–1947), painter and painting teacher; Yuko Takada Keller (born 1958), artist, curator, writer, based in Denmark; Asami Kiyokawa (born 1980), embroidery artist; Rieko Kodama (born 1963), video game designer, artist; Nahoko Kojima (born 1981), paper cut artist; Shigeko Kubota (1937–2015), video artist, sculptor
Kiyohara Yukinobu struck out on a path in the late 17th century that few women in Japan had navigated, becoming an accomplished artist in the Kanō school — and, for a century after, was name ...
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Q Hayashida (林田 球, Hayashida Kyū, born 1977) is the pen name of a Japanese manga artist.She is best known for her series Dorohedoro, which was formerly serialized in Monthly Ikki, but moved to Hibana after Ikki ceased publication, [1] [2] and later moved to Monthly Shōnen Sunday after Hibana ceased publication.
K. Yuna Kagesaki; Yukiko Kai; Hiroyuki Kaidō; Kaishaku (manga group) Kaito Takahashi; Yuji Kaku; Teruo Kakuta; Kazuo Kamimura; Tsutomu Kamishiro; Muneyuki Kaneshiro