Ken Niimura (born October 19, 1981), is a Spanish-Japanese author of graphic novels.

Ken Niimura
Ken Niimura in Tokyo, February 2012.
Born
José Maria Ken Niimura del Barrio

(1981-10-19) October 19, 1981 (age 43)
Occupation(s)cartoonist, comics artist

He is best known for works like I Kill Giants, 2012 International Manga Award winner that was adapted into a film in 2018; and Umami, winner of the 2019 Eisner Award for Best Digital Comic.

Niimura has published original work in all major comics markets (US, Europe and Japan) and his works have been translated into some 12 languages. He currently lives and works in Tokyo.

Biography

edit

Early life and education

edit

Niimura was born in Madrid in 1981 to a Japanese father and a Spanish mother. He begam his training with the artist Manuela Sánchez González and would later continue his studies at the Escuela de Arte La Palma (Madrid) alongside artist such as Pepe Larraz, Esther Gili and Carlos Salgado. He holds a degree in Fine Arts from the Complutense University of Madrid.[1] The Erasmus Programme allowed him the opportunity to study in the Illustration Department at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Brussels.

Career

edit

1997-2008: Career beginnings

edit

He began his career as a self-published artist, being a founding member of collectives such as H Studios, Arruequen and the Epicentro publishing label. It was also at this time that he started publishing numerous short stories in Spanish magazines and fanzines, such as "Oni" (2001), published in the anthology La Senda del Samurai (Arruequen), resulting in various awards at the National level.[2]

At the age of 20, his first work Underground Love was released through Amaníaco, a publisher with which he was to work again on numerous occasions. Other books released in this early period include Clockwork, Otras Jaulas, Historietas and Qu4ttrocento. He has been an illustrator for magazines such as Dokan, Minami and Shirase, as well as the Japanese in Mangaland series (written by Marc Bernabé). He has been involved in various advertising campaigns, including publicity for Repsol, the Barcelona Manga Convention and Spanish TV channel Cuatro; for the latter he produced the illustrations that appeared in the show "La noche manga". He was also in charge of the cover and the ad for the book Los niños vienen sin manual de instrucciones, by Montserrat Giménez, Ph.D. in Psychology.[3]

In 2007, he participated in the Lingua Comica Project[4] promoted by the Asia-Europe Foundation (ASEF) alongside various Asian and European comic professionals including Sarnath Banerjee, Gerald Corridge and Kôsei Ono, among others.

2009-2015: I Kill Giants and Henshin

edit

His professional debut came with the publication of I Kill Giants (2009), written by Joe Kelly and published originally by Image Comics. This work, created following his move to Paris, obtained an Eisner Award nomination in 2010 in the category of "Best Publication for Teens" and won the International Manga Award in 2012.[5] It was also adapted into a film of the same name that was released in 2018.

The success of I Kill Giants led him to collaborate with international magazines such as Black (Italy), Mandala (Japan), Popgun (USA), C'est Bon Anthology (Sweden), Spera (USA) and Fluide Glamour (France). The resulting short stories were released in the anthology Traveling (Norma Editorial, 2014)

Having then moved to Japan, where he still lives, he began writing a series in 2013 for Shogakukan's Monthly Ikki magazine called Henshin, whose 13 chapters were collected as a short story collection that is a sort of fictionalised diary of his life in Tokyo. An English-language edition was later published through Image Comics in 2014.

He continued working as an illustrator on projects such as the special edition of the acclaimed card game Love Letter by Seiji Kanai[6] or for the online magazine Slate, as well as collaborating with the music group The Naked and Famous, who released a single entitled I Kill Giants (2013) inspired by his earlier work. Meanwhile, he was also publishing stand-alone stories in The Amazing Spiderman.

2016-2022: Umami, Never Open It and Peni Parker

edit

In 2017, he began writing and illustrating Umami, a webcomic released through Panel Syndicate, which tells the adventures of two cooks in a fantastic world, and that won the Eisner Award in 2019 for Best Digital Comic.[7]

After a 3-year development process spread across Japan, Europe and the US, he published Never Open It in 2021 through Yen Press. This graphic novel is a reinterpretations of the Japanese legends of Urashima Tarô, The Crane Wife and Ikkyu-san.[8]

Just a year later, in 2022, the webcomic Peni Parker: After School (Marvel) was released, becoming the first long-form story featuring Peni Parker, a popular character that had appeared in the movie Spider-man: Into the Spider-Verse.

In recent years he had worked as an illustrator for L'Oréal China, the Spanish brewery Mahou, Judd Apatow, Marvel Comics, the Japanese rock group Grapevine and NHK Broadcasting Japan, among others. In addition, he is the author of the art direction of the video game prototype Twinbee LOOP!, winner of the Konami Action & Shooting Contest in 2012.[9]

2023-Present: Immortal Sergeant

edit

His latest work, Immortal Sergeant (2023, Image Comics), brought back together with Joe Kelly to create a road movie in which a veteran inspector sets out with his son in search of a murderer.[10]

That same year he collaborated with Alyssa Wong on Sparkle & Shine, the first story featuring the Venom magical girl Necroko, which gathered a very positive reaction from readers.[11]

Teaching

edit

As a teacher, Niimura has taught workshops on comics and manga at the University of Salamanca, Casa Asia, and the Japanese House of Culture in Paris, among other centres.[12]

  • 2008 and 2009: Spanish-Japanese Cultura Centre (Salamanca, Spain).
  • 2008 and 2010: Japanese cultural House in Paris (French: Maison de la culture du Japon à Paris), Paris, France).
  • 2014 and 2015: Escola Joso. Visual Arts and Comic Centre (Barcelona, Spain).
  • 2019: The Animation workshop (Viborg, Denmark).
  • 2019 and 2022: School of Visual Arts (New York, US).

Exhibitions

edit
Year Title Other Artist Venue Country
2008 Images d'un monde flottant Château de la Chesnaie France
2010 Imágenes de un mundo flotante Studio Banana Spain
2014 Chez Niimura Gallery Antena Japan
2014 Chez Niimura XX Barcelona Manga Convention Spain
2016 Making a Scene The Lakes International Comic Art Festival UK
2018 Otogibanashi Miki Yamamoto Pinpoint Gallery Japan
2019 Ken Niimura Exhibition Manga Night Books Japan
2023 Lo mejor del Siglo de Oro Spanish Embassy in Japan Japan

Jury

edit

Niimura has served as a member of the jury at:[12]

  • 2006: Sitges Film Festival (Sitges, Spain).
  • 2019: Wacom International Comic/Manga School Contest (Japan).
  • 2021: The Golden Pinwheel Young Illustrators Competition (China).

Style

edit

As a result of the influence of Japanese. European and American comics, Niimura's style is characterised by its humour and dynamism.

Adding to Niimura's multicultural background, his access to comics from very different places and heritages has had a significant impact on his artwork; this, combined with having lived in various parts of the world, has enabled him to gain an in-depth understanding of the different comic scenes.[13]

The success of I Kill Giants introduced him to the US market. Niimura explains that, when creating a project that is going to be published in different markets, when you shift the reading order of something originally intended to be read from right to left to read from left to riht, the key lies in how the full page is conceived, albeit there are certain small differences such as the perception of time.[14]

Umami was a turning point in the author's style. The result of an arduous process, this episodic work allowed Niimura to experiment and find his own voice, in turn influencing his later works. In addition to this, on the idea of publishing Umami as a webcomic, the author says: "There is much more fluid and unfiltered communication between the artist and the reader that is priceless and that helps us stay motivated".[15]

Works

edit

Graphic novels

edit
Year Title Other authors Publisher
2009 I Kill Giants Joe Kelly Image Comics
2015 Henshin Image Comics
2017-2018 Umami Panel Syndicate
2021 Never Open It Yen Press
2022 Peni Parker: After School Marvel Unlimited
2023 Immortal Sergeant Joe Kelly Image Comics

Art Books

edit
Year Title Other authors Publisher
2011 Zero: JM Ken Niimura Illustrations Image Comics

Short stories

edit
Year Title Other authors Publication Publisher
2009 The other woman Joe Kelly Amazing Spiderman #612 Marvel Comics
2009 Chasing a Goldfish Popgun #4 Image Comics
2010 Norah's last night in NYC Joe Kelly Amazing Spiderman #647 Marvel Comics
2013 Just a kiss Spera vol. 3 Archaia
2016 Boring Sundays Gotham Academy #16 DC Comics
2021 Traditional Pink Sushi Marvel Voices: Identity #1 Marvel Comics
2022 My Dream House Nichi Getsu Ten Stories Mateusz Urbanowicz
2023 Sparkle and Shine Alyssa Wong Extreme Venomverse #4 Marvel Comics
2024 Heartless Joe Kelly Tezucomi #2 Magnetic Press

Awards and nominations

edit
Year Award Category Work Result
2010 Eisner Award Best Publication for Teens I Kill Giants Nominated
2012 International Manga Award Gold Award I Kill Giants Winner
2019 Eisner Award Best Digital Comic Umami Winner

Film adaptations

edit

I Kill Giants (2009), nominated for an Eisner Award in 2010 for "Best Publication for Teens" and winner of the International Manga Award in 2012, has a film adaptation: I Kill Giants (2018), starring Madison Wolfe, Zoe Saldana and Imogen Poots. It premiered at the Toronto International Films Festival in 2017, and reached the US theatres in 2018. The film can currently be seen on Netflix.

References

edit
  1. ^ "Ken Niimura Resume" (PDF).
  2. ^ "Facultad de Bellas Artes". bellasartes.ucm.es. Retrieved 2023-03-18.
  3. ^ Argiz, Jorge Iván (2006-09-29). "desdemimundo: Cosas Varias 82 - KEN NIIMURA portadista de libros". desdemimundo. Retrieved 2023-03-18.
  4. ^ "LINGUA COMICA". LINGUA COMICA. Retrieved 2023-03-18.
  5. ^ RTVE.es/EFE (2012-02-17). "Ken Niimura, Premio Internacional de Manga de Japón". RTVE.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-03-18.
  6. ^ Serra (2016-06-04). "Ken Niimura publicará una versión del juego Love Letter en Japón". Ramen Para Dos (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-03-18.
  7. ^ EFE (2019-07-20). "Los españoles Julia Madrigal, Gabriel Hernández y Ken Niimura ganan los 'Oscar del cómic' en San Diego". RTVE.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-03-18.
  8. ^ "No lo abras jamás, leyendas sobre lo prohibido por Ken Niimura - SALA DE PELIGRO". SALA DE PELIGRO - Cómics (in Spanish). 2021-02-20. Retrieved 2023-03-18.
  9. ^ República/EFE (2022-09-17). "Konami premia un proyecto español sobre TwinBee". Republica.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-03-19.
  10. ^ "Immortal Sergeant". Image Comics. Retrieved 2023-03-19.
  11. ^ "Extreme Venomverse #4 Reviews". League of Comic Geeks. Retrieved 2024-11-14.
  12. ^ a b "about". ken niimura. Retrieved 2023-03-19.
  13. ^ Fiamma, Andrea (2019-01-03). "In conversazione con J.M. Ken Niimura, fumettista che abita il mondo". Fumettologica (in Italian). Retrieved 2023-03-19.
  14. ^ O'Keefe, Matt (2018-07-31). "Syndicated Comics". The Beat. Retrieved 2023-03-19.
  15. ^ "Ken Niimura on Creating the Perfect Intro Story for Peni Parker". Marvel Entertainment. Retrieved 2023-03-19.

Bibliography

edit
edit