Artist Acro

Japanese manga series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Artist Acro (Japanese: アーティストアクロ, Hepburn: Aateisuto Akuro) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Ato Sakurai [ja]. It was serialized in Shogakukan's shōnen manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Sunday from July 2008 to October 2009, and later on Club Sunday from November 2009 to March 2010. Its chapters were collected in nine tankōbon volumes.

WrittenbyAto Sakurai [ja]
PublishedbyShogakukan
ImprintShōnen Sunday Comics
Magazine
  • Weekly Shōnen Sunday
  • (July 16, 2008 – October 31, 2009)
  • Club Sunday
  • (November 3, 2009 – March 16, 2010)
Quick facts アーティストアクロ (Aateisuto Akuro), Written by ...
Artist Acro
First tankōbon volume cover
アーティストアクロ
(Aateisuto Akuro)
Manga
Written byAto Sakurai [ja]
Published byShogakukan
ImprintShōnen Sunday Comics
Magazine
  • Weekly Shōnen Sunday
  • (July 16, 2008 – October 31, 2009)
  • Club Sunday
  • (November 3, 2009 – March 16, 2010)
Original runJuly 2, 2008March 16, 2010
Volumes9
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Story

Once upon a time, artists were able to use their special skills freely, until seven years ago with a group of artists began using souls as raw materials for their work. Now society lives in fear of artists as a young man named Acro Hanbakka travels to the capital city to ply his trade as a sculptor and to realize his dream of becoming a great artist.

Publication

Written and illustrated by Ato Sakurai [ja], Artist Acro was serialized in Shogakukan's Weekly Shōnen Sunday from July 2, 2008,[a] to October 31, 2009.[3] It was transferred to Shogakukan's online magazine Club Sunday on November 3, 2009,[3] and finished on March 16, 2010.[4][5] Shogakukan collected its chapters in nine tankōbon volumes, published from January 16, 2009,[6] and May 18, 2010.[7]

Volumes

More information No., Japanese release date ...
No. Japanese release date Japanese ISBN
1January 16, 2009[6]978-4-09-121577-2
2March 18, 2009[8]978-4-09-121618-2
3June 18, 2009[9]978-4-09-122022-6
4August 18, 2009[10]978-4-09-121723-3
5November 18, 2009[11]978-4-09-121888-9
6January 18, 2010[12]978-4-09-122138-4
7March 18, 2010[13]978-4-09-122189-6
8April 16, 2010[14]978-4-09-122029-5
9May 18, 2010[7]978-4-09-122298-5
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Notes

  1. It started in the magazine's 31st issue of 2008 (with cover date July 16),[1] released on July 2 of that same year (same date of Sakurai's first message on Web Sunday's Backstage).[2]

References

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