Nekojiru
Chiyomi Hashiguchi (æ©‹å£ åƒä»£ç¾Ž Hashiguchi Chiyomi, née Nakayama (ä¸å±±), January 1, 1967 – May 10, 1998), known by the pen name Nekojiru (ãã“ã¢ã‚‹, a portmanteau of Japanese neko ãã“ "cat", and jiru ã¢ã‚‹ "soup"), was a Japanese manga artist.
In 1990, she debuted in the June issue of the monthly manga anthology Garo with Nekojiru, which is now considered her definitive work.
Shortly before her suicide, NyÄko and Nyatta, the two main characters of Nekojiru Udon, were selected to be used by Tokyo Electric in promotional campaigns. However, the death of their creator caused that to be cancelled.[1]
Works
With the exception of Tsunami, all Nekojiru's work has main characters drawn as cats. Even in her manga essays, Jirujiru Travel Journal and Jirujiru Diary, she drew herself as a cat. But though the characters appear as animals, the artist chose as her setting not a forest, but rather the human world. Her manga detailing the daily life and adventures of the cats NyÄko and Nyatta are held in high esteem. The major themes of her work are a childlike zaniness, cruelty and nostalgia. And, as we know from Dream Memo, included in the posthumously released compilation Nekojiru Udon 3, many of her bizarre works of fantasy were based on her own dream experiences. Psychedelic mushrooms and LSD also often appear in her works.
Yamano Hajime, using the pen-name Nekojiru-y, took over Nekojiru's world, and continues to produce new works. Currently on his official site, one can read a free chapter of Nekojiru's manga.
There have been two animated adaptations of Nekojiru's manga, both of them focusing on the family of NyÄko, Nyatta and their parents. The first of these was Nekojiru GekijÅ (ãã“ã¢ã‚‹åŠ‡å ´ Nekojiru Theatre), a 27 × 2 minute series which aired on Japanese TV in 1999 as one segment of Asahi Television's BakushÅ-Mondai no Boss-Kyara-ÅŒ (爆笑å•é¡Œã®ãƒœã‚¹ã‚ャラ王), led by comedy duo BakushÅ Mondai. The second, and more famous, at least among English speakers, is the 2001 OVA Nekojiru SÅ (ãã“ã¢ã‚‹è‰ Nekojiru Grass), released in English as Cat Soup.
List of works
- Nekojiru Udon (ãã“ã¢ã‚‹ã†ã©ã‚“)
- Nekogamisama (ãã“神ã•ã¾ Cat God)
- Nekojiru ManjÅ« (ãã“ã¢ã‚‹ã¾ã‚“ã˜ã‚…ã†)
- Nekojiru Dango (ãã“ã¢ã‚‹ã ã‚“ã”)
- Nekojiru Shokudo (ãã“ã¢ã‚‹é£Ÿå ‚ Nekojiru Cafeteria)
- Nekojiru Senbei (ãã“ã¢ã‚‹ã›ã‚“ã¹ã„)
- Jirujiru RyokÅki (ã¢ã‚‹ã¢ã‚‹æ—…行記 Jirujiru Travel Journal)
- Jirujiru Nikki (ã¢ã‚‹ã¢ã‚‹æ—¥è¨˜ Jirujiru Diary)
Nekojiru also worked as an illustrator and character designer on other projects.
Death
Hashiguchi committed suicide on May 10, 1998.[2]
In popular culture
Gothball episode "Japan" is an homage to Nekojiru's work. "Pieces of paper" (LSD) of Nekojiru cat faces are seen in the episode "Goth's Trip".
References
- ↑ Yoshinaga, Yoshiaki. "Yoshiaki Yoshinaga on Nekojiru - pt. 2". Anipages. Benjamin Ettinger. Retrieved 17 April 2015.
- ↑ Patten, Fred (November 21, 2003). "New from Japan: Anime Film Reviews". Animation World Magazine. Retrieved 23 May 2009.
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