Well, A professional artist can work in a studio and at home. Basically anywhere really. And artists that aren't quite to the professional level can work anywhere also. When I draw manga, I usually draw where it is quite or where I can find a good pose, and I also carry a small sketchbook with me at school. I never really draw in it, but once there is something that inspires me I can quickly to a 5 sec sketch and continue it later. My point is you can work just about anywhere. ^^ I hope that helped
If you are referring to the Bakuman anecdote, Saiko says that the story may or may not have been true and never names the mangaka.
Mangaka (漫画家)
Mangas are popular in US but only those mangas done in Japan...In Japan writing and drawing manga is a good payed job, but in US I think nobody pays much money for manga artist...Reason in Japan children reads manga and if manga becomes popular than they make anime based on manga, than if anime becomes more popular than manga, they sell it world wide first stop US...Children and anime fans in US first saw animes like Naruto, Bleach DB etc, and than they heard bout manga on which those anime were based, so they want to read it to compare and see what was rooth of their favorite anime...So manga artist is prominent job in Japan, in US it is prominent to work for DC and draw superheros...
Neji Hyuga is one of the main supporting characters from the manga TV series - Naruto. Neji Hyuga was created by the famous japanese manga artist Masashi Kishimoto.
You can be whatever you want to be don't let people tell you that you cant be a mangaka there are people that are not Japanese who are mangaka for example Stan Lee the creator of Spiderman he made a manga with Hiroyuki Takei (the creator of Shaman King ) called ULTIMO http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultimo_(manga)
yes, where do you think manga artist get there design work from, they have all had inspiration from other artist at one point or another.
A manga chamber is a dedicated space or room where a manga artist creates their work. It typically includes a workstation, reference materials, tools, and storage for completed pages. It is a private and focused environment for the artist to work on their manga projects.
Consider choosing a title that reflects the central theme or unique aspect of your manga. You could also play around with words related to your characters, setting, or storyline to create a catchy and memorable title. Make sure it's easy to remember and captures the essence of your manga.
Masaki Satou - manga artist - was born in 1976.
MATO is a Japanese manga artist known for their work as the illustrator for the "Legend of Zelda" manga series published by Akira Himekawa. MATO has also worked on other manga adaptations of popular video game franchises, such as "Pokémon Adventures."
Mitsuo Hashimoto - manga artist - was born on 1955-11-05.
Mangakas typically do not directly request anime adaptations of their work. Instead, their publishers or production companies may approach them to discuss the possibility of turning their manga into an anime. If a manga becomes popular enough, it may generate interest from production companies looking to adapt it into an anime series.
the manga artist!
You have your own studio, and you generally submit your work to a magazine or a publishing company or both, and they pay you a royalty of the the funds they make off of your work.
Artist and Author
Yukirin is an anime/manga artist.
The responsibilities of a manga artist include creating original storylines, drawing characters and backgrounds, designing layouts and panels, adding dialogue and text, and meeting deadlines set by publishers. They are also responsible for ensuring the overall visual consistency and coherence of their work.