Kenji Tsuruta (鶴田 謙二, Tsuruta Kenji, born May 9, 1961 in Hamamatsu, Shizuoka Prefecture) is a Japanese manga artist. Among his most famous works is the science fiction series Spirit of Wonder, which has been adapted into an anime series and brought him much acclaim.
Profile
During his formative years in university as a student of optical science, Tsuruta, who had initially wanted to be a photographer, had been inspired by the works of numerous science fiction authors, such as Robert A. Heinlein, and manga artists, such as Yukinobu Hoshino and his manga Sabertooth Tiger, which had inspired him to create manga.[1] He has also cited Tetsuya Chiba and his manga among his inspirations.[1]
Soon after graduating, he wrote numerous dōjinshi and was an assistant to numerous manga artists, prior to making his debut as a professional manga artist.[1] In 1986, Tsuruta made his professional debut, authoring his first manga series, the short work, Hiroku te suteki na uchū ja nai ka (広くてすてきな宇宙じゃないか, a.k.a. What a Big Wonderful Universe It Is), which was serialized in Kodansha's Weekly Morning seinen magazine, set in a world where the land was sinking into water. Tsuruta has cited that the inspiration to this debut work of his came during a train journey from Tokyo to the ocean at Odawara, during which he had seen numerous rice paddies and thought of the possibility of a train line passing through the ocean, after which he wanted to create a work where he could use this image.[1]
Soon after, Tsuruta authored Spirit of Wonder, among his most famous works, in which he applied many of his inspirations, which was serialized in Kodansha's seinen magazines Weekly Morning and Afternoon between 1987 and 1996, and was later adapted into an anime series.
After Spirit of Wonder, Tsuruta wrote short manga works, and also illustrated numerous art books, which were quite successful. In 2002, he provided the character designs for the anime series Abenobashi Mahō Shōtengai and also illustrated its manga adaptation.
In 2000 and 2001, Tsuruta received the 31st and 32nd Seiun Awards for outstanding artist of the year.[2] He has also received the Hayakawa Award for best illustrator, in 2000.
Works
Tankōbon
- Spirit of Wonder (serialized in Morning and Afternoon, 1986–1995)
- SF Meibutsū – Shoki Sakuhinshū (SF名物-初期作品集)
- Magical Shopping Arcade Abenobashi (character designs, illustrator of manga)
- Forget-me-not
- Nippon Furusato Chinbotsu (日本ふるさと沈没; anthology)
- Emanon: Memories of Emanon (おもいでエマノン, Omoide Emanon); original story: Shinji Kajio
- Wandering Island; licensed by Dark Horse Comics[3] (冒険エレキテ島, Bōken Erekitetou)
- La Pomme Prisonnière (ポム・プリゾニエール, 2014)
Artbooks
- suiso – hydrogen (水素-hydrogen)
- Eternal
- Hitahita (ひたひた)
- Comet (コメット, Kometto)
- Tsuruta Kenji Kyōyō Gashū: Made in China (鶴田謙二教養画集 MADE IN CHINA; CD-ROM artbook)
Other works
- The Sky Crawlers (illustrations)
References
- 1 2 3 4 "Interview with Kenji Tsuruta". February 1996. Archived from the original on 2007-06-12. Retrieved 2007-06-21.
- ↑ "Seiun Award Winners:星雲賞受賞作リスト" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2007-06-21.
- ↑ "Dark Horse Comics Licenses Kenji Tsuruta's Wandering Island Manga". Anime News Network. Retrieved 20 July 2016.