Jason Shiga

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born1976 (age 4849)
Oakland, California, U.S.
Area(s)Cartoonist
Notable works
Meanwhile, Fleep, Demon
AwardsXeric Award, 1999
Eisner Award, 2004
Ignatz Award, 2004
Stumptown Comics Award, 2007
Jason Shiga
Jason Shiga in Berlin in 2008.
Born1976 (age 4849)
Oakland, California, U.S.
Area(s)Cartoonist
Notable works
Meanwhile, Fleep, Demon
AwardsXeric Award, 1999
Eisner Award, 2004
Ignatz Award, 2004
Stumptown Comics Award, 2007
http://www.shigabooks.com

Jason Shiga (born 1976) is an American cartoonist who incorporates puzzles, mysteries and unconventional narrative techniques into his work.[1]

Jason Shiga is from Oakland, California.[2][3] His father, Seiji Shiga, was an animator who worked on the 1964 Rankin-Bass production Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. Jason Shiga was a pure mathematics major at the University of California at Berkeley, from which he graduated in 1998.[2]

Career

Shiga is credited as the "Maze Specialist" for Issue #18 (Winter 2005/2006) of the literary journal McSweeney's Quarterly, which features a solved maze on the front cover and a (slightly different) unsolved maze on the back. The title page of each story in the journal is headed by a maze segment labeled with numbers leading to the first pages of other stories.

Shiga has also drawn and written several comics and illustrated features for Nickelodeon Magazine, some of which feature his original creations, and some starring Nickelodeon characters such as SpongeBob SquarePants and the Fairly OddParents.

Shiga makes a cameo appearance in the Derek Kirk Kim comic Ungrateful Appreciation as a Rubik's Cube-solving nerd.

Techniques and materials

According to the rear credits page of Empire State: A Love Story, Shiga, who was inspired by an actual Greyhound Bus trip from Oakland to New York to create that story, pencilled it with a yellow No. 2 pencil on copy paper. He then inked it with a lightbox and a 222 size Winsor & Newton brush, and lettered it with a Micron 08 felt-tip pen. The colors were applied digitally by John Pham.[2] His book Meanwhile uses a system of branching tubes that connect panels to make a interactive story.

Awards

Won

Nominated

  • 2018 Angouleme Festival Sélection Officielle, Demon.
  • 2018 Angouleme Festival Prix du Public, Demon.
  • 2016 Los Angeles Times Book Prize nominee: Graphic Novel/Comics, Demon.
  • 2016 Ignatz Award nominee: Outstanding Series, Demon.
  • 2014 Ignatz Award nominee: Outstanding Webcomic, Demon.
  • 2012 Harvey Award nominee: Best Letterer, Best Inker, Best Writer, Best Artist, Empire State.
  • 2011 Harvey Award nominee: Best Original Graphic Publication for Younger Readers, Meanwhile.
  • 2007 Eisner Comic Industry Award nominee: Best Graphic Album, Bookhunter.
  • 2007 Ignatz Award nominee: Outstanding Graphic Novel, Bookhunter.
  • 2004 Eisner Comic Industry Award nominee: Best Single Issue or One-Shot, Fleep.

Bibliography

References

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