Fumiko Takano
Fumiko Takano
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Fumiko Takano

Fumiko Takano (高野文子, Takano Fumiko; born 12 November 1957) is a Japanese manga artist. She is considered to be one of the manga artists of the "New Wave" of the late 1970s and early 1980s, when she started as a doujinshi (amateur) artist and then drew short stories with an unconventional style for magazines like June and Petit Flower. She was also a pioneer for female manga artists to publish outside of female-oriented publishing venues. Two of Takano's short story collections, Zettai Anzen Kamisori (1982) and Kiiroi Hon (2002), won awards. While she has a strong fan base in Japan, her work is less known internationally.

Takano was born in the countryside of Niigata Prefecture in 1957. When she was nine years old, she had to spend three months in a hospital due to a problem with her kidney. She did not read many manga during her childhood, as none except few by Osamu Tezuka were available, and instead she read children's literature that she borrowed from the library. During high school, she became fascinated with the works of shōjo manga artist Moto Hagio and she started drawing her own manga based on a guidebook by Shotaro Ishinomori. She submitted a short story of her own to an amateur contest of Bessatsu Shōjo Comic magazine, which Moto Hagio published her works in at the time, and received a prize. When she submitted another work to the magazine, it was rejected.

After graduating from high school, she moved to Tokyo and studied at a nursing school. She worked as a nurse for two years afterwards. During this time, she discovered COM magazine and the works of Shinji Nagashima and Fumiko Okada [ja]. She started drawing doujinshi amateur manga, she participated in the Comiket and published her first short story Hana ("Flower") in 1977 in the zine Rakugakikan. One of the members of the zine became one of the founders of the new manga magazine June, which became crucial for the development of Boys' love manga. She published her first work as a professional manga artist in 1979 in June with the short story "Zettai Anzen Kamisori". She continued publishing in June as well as anthologies around the Meikyū manga critic circle like Manga Kisōtengai. However, soon she also drew manga for commercial shōjo manga magazines like Petit Flower and Seventeen.

Her first short story collection Zettai Anzen Kamisori, named after her professional debut, was published by Hakusensha in 1982 in an unusual A5 format and with a cover design by Garo editor Minami Shinbo. The short story collection was a critical success. In the beginning of the 1980s, she was working as a secretary at the small publisher Kitansha. Her husband Kyoichiro Akiyama also worked for this publisher and edited, among others, some of Katsuhiro Otomo's short story collections. Kitansha published Takano's second short story collection Otomodachi in 1983.

In the late 1980s, she focused completely on her manga career. She drew two series, Lucky Jō-chan no Atarashii Shigoto (1986–1987) and Ruki-san (1988–1992). She also continued publishing short stories in the magazine Petit Flower until the early 1990s.

Her output slowed then in the mid-1990s, as she felt tired of producing: "I couldn’t work at the rate I used to, and I started to notice the younger generation catching up to me, and I started thinking, like, what am I supposed to do once I’m tired of this?" From 1996 until 2001, she published four short stories in the alternative manga magazines Comic Are! and Comic Cue [ja] as well as the seinen manga magazine Monthly Afternoon. These were published under Afternoon's imprint at Kodansha as the short story collection Kiiroi Hon in 2002. She did not publish any book after the release of Kiiroi Hon until Dimitri Tomkins was released first as a web comic and then as a book in 2014.

Most of her manga are short stories rather than series. In her early work, she experimented with several different genres, among them samurai stories, social satires and love stories.

Takano only draws manga when she feels like it. In an interview, she said she regularly has to step away from fiction, both in terms of reading and creating it. She published only relatively few works since then and is considered to be an exceptionally slow artist in the manga industry, as only seven books of hers have been published as of July 2023.

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