Performance name: Anniversary of the world exhibition Yasuhiro Naito-TRIGUN & Blood Circle Front-
Valid period: 2019/6/12 (Wed) to 2019/6/19 (Wed)
Venue: Seibu Ikebukuro Main Store Annex 2F = Seibu Gallery (Tokyo)
Notes :
The ticket is valid once during the period. Opening hours: 10:00 to 21:00, 6/16 (Sun) 10:00 to 20:00, 6/19 (Wed) 10:00 to 18:00 (admission is 30 minutes before closing). The contents of the event are subject to change.
Reference about performances:
Sanseido bookstore Ikebukuro Main Store: 03-6864-8900
Yasuhiro Naito original exhibition of the "World Exhibition -TRIGUN & Blood Blockade Battlefront debut 25 anniversary Yasuhiro Naito -" will be held in Tokyo, Seibu Ikebukuro head office annex the second floor of the Seibu Gallery up to 19 days from June 12.
In this exhibition, which is held to commemorate Naito's 25th anniversary, he will make a debut with his debut works and names, focusing on "Trigun" and "Blood Circle Front". There will also be a large number of original goods and prints produced for the exhibition at the venue. The official website, official Twitter (@nightow_sekai), opens today on April 1st. Details of ticket and goods sales will be communicated later
"Death 25th Anniversary Yasuhiro Naito's World Exhibition-TRIGUN & Blood Circle Front-"
Period: Wednesday, June 12, 2019 to Wednesday, 19: 10:00 to 21: 00 (※ June 16 20:00, June 19 only the venue 18: 00 closing. Admission is 30 minutes before closing time each day)
Venue: Seibu Ikebukuro Main Store Annex 2nd floor Seibu Gallery
Admission: General 800 yen, Senior High School student 600 yen, Junior high school student 300 yen (free for elementary school students and below)
Yasuhiro Nightow (内藤 泰弘 , Naitō Yasuhiro, born April 8, 1967 in Yokohama, Japan) is a Japanese manga artist. His major work Trigun was adopted into an anime series and film. He also designed the characters for the video game and anime series Gungrave, and has been working on the manga Blood Blockade Battlefront.
Nightow was born in Yokohama, and moved to Yokosuka when he was in elementary school, and spent his junior high and high school years in Shizuoka. His first exposure to comics was through Fujio Akatsuka's Tensai Bakabon, and he was also influenced by the comics of Leiji Matsumoto such as Yamato, Harlock and 999. He also was drawn to the work done in Shonen Sunday which included artists Rumiko Takahashi and Fujihiko Hosono. Regarding "new wave" artists, he liked Katsuhiro Otomo from Sayonara Nippon, and Fumiko Takano.
He studied social science and then majored in media studies at Housei University. While there, he drew manga as a hobby, and made some dojinshi. After graduation, he worked Sekisui House where he sold apartments. After three and a half years, he quit his job to draw full-time. His first one-shot manga was based on the popular video game franchise Samurai Spirits. He had also developed a story titled Call XXXX which was published in Super Jump magazine.
With the help of a publisher friend, he submitted a Trigun story for the February 1995 issue of the Tokuma Shoten magazine Shōnen Captain, and began regular serialization two months later in April. However, Shōnen Captain was canceled early in 1997, and when Nightow was approached by the magazine Young King Ours, published by Shōnen Gahōsha, they were interested in him beginning a new work. Nightow though, was troubled by the idea of leaving Trigun incomplete, and requested to be allowed to finish the series. The publishers were sympathetic, and the manga resumed in 1998 as Trigun Maximum (トライガンマキシマム , Toraigan Makishimamu) . The story jumps forward two years with the start of Maximum. Despite this, Nightow has stated that the new title was purely down to the change of publishers. Trigun Maximum ran until 2007 and generated 14 tankōbon volumes. The Trigun series was adapted into an anime series by Madhouse and had a limited broadcast run in 1998. It received an English adaptation which aired on Cartoon Network. Its popularity in the United States resulted in creation of a feature film Trigun: Badlands Rumble in 2010.
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