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The 50 Years of Go Nagai exhibit celebrating half a century’s work by Japanese manga artist Go Nagai, 73, will open on September 14 at the Ueno Royal Museum in Tokyo.
The exhibit, cosponsored by The Sankei Shimbun and the Go Nagai Exhibition Executive Committee, runs through September 29.
“I feel like I’ve just been doing the work at hand, trying to meet deadlines, and somehow 50 years have passed,” Nagai said during the July 30 press conference at the Sankei Shimbun headquarters to announce the upcoming Tokyo exhibition.
Source: Photo by Sankei Shimbun | © JAPAN Forward
The exhibition is making rounds and is currently on display at the Ishikawa Prefectural Museum of History in Kanazawa through August 25. An exhibition was held in Osaka in 2018.
The Tokyo exhibition will feature over 600 items, ranging from original manuscripts to color illustrations from Nagai’s more than 350 works. Debut GO 2, a sequel to the autobiographical manga Debut GO that attracted much attention from fans around the time of Nagai’s debut as an artist, will be shown for the first time and added to his list of works.
At the press conference, Nagai invited the public to see the exhibit: “It seems I was always fighting against time. But even though I had to cut corners at times, there were also works that I dedicated a lot of time to. In that sense, these works show the real me that I welcome everyone to experience at the exhibit.”
Source: Photo by Sankei Shimbun | © JAPAN Forward
Soaking Up Experiences to Create New Works
From his early works — including Harenchi Gakuen (Shameless School) with its erotic jokes, to Mazinger Z, his monumental robot anime, and the hard action Devilman — Nagai’s multifarious styles have charmed fans for years. He currently works on a serial publication.
When asked how he comes up with ideas, Nagai explained: “My ideas surface all of a sudden when I get ready to draw. If I have blank paper in front of me, some sort of idea will surface.”
Source: Photo by Sankei Shimbun | © JAPAN Forward
Nagai revealed his secret to working as a successful manga artist over such a long period of time: “I’ve always tried to soak up everything happening around me and experience everything I can. Although I have frequent ups and downs, I’ve always taken care to try to make the good times last up to a deadline. There were times when my readers lost interest. That’s when I created new things to bring them back into the fold and pulled through tough times.”
He continued, “Everything I greedily sucked in got mixed up inside my head and became my works.”
Written by Japan ForwardThe continuation of this article can be read on the "Japan Forward" site.
‘50 Years of Go Nagai’ Exhibit Coming to the Ueno Royal Museum in September 2019