Inoue Takehiko drew a painting of Miyamoto Musashi in the Ueno Royal Museum Tokyo before "The LAST Manga Exhibition", measuring 8x5 meters.. i don't own the footage edited i took the footage from • Inoue Takehiko - Entra...
Vagabond was dropped due to the mental strain it caused Inoue. Seeing this, I completely understand. How does one man even begin to put this painting together?
just read the description, stating this piece was for a museum exhibit, but my original comment still stands. this dude is next level when it comes to mangaka, even standing out amongst the greats like Oda and Miura dare I say.
@@poorlydigitallydrawngigachad I wouldn't consider Miura to be one of the best mangakas. Sure, he wrote a really good story and berserk art is easily top tier but he just wasn't consistent with chapter releases, unlike the two mentioned above. Also the story degraded in quality after conviction arc
@@poorlydigitallydrawngigachad False, he died of acute aortic dissection, a condition which can happen to anyone at anytime and you can't know about it before hand. His health was completely fine, he was just lazy
Creating something makes you feel really proud of yourself. All that hard work amounting to something so amazing is an addictive feeling. Makes you really wanna give it your all everytime.
@@wiss256 I will take your word for it, I have yet to experience that hook but when I'll perform my first piano piece that took me half a year of struggling to perfect then i'm sure I'll feel huge relief, then I'll move on to the next project till I die. I won't have it any other way either.
I just finished reading Vagabond till the latest chapter 327 and it is really beautiful. Almost every panel was like a traditional Japanese painting. Although the story isn't complete and I know it is at a very long hiatus or dropped, it is one of the best manga I have ever read. This man really deserves a break
When I was reading Vagabond, I was constantly thinking about the artwork and the ungodly amount of effort it took to draw those pages. From the background to the characters moving, clothes, weapons, vegetation, it was all done without a single drop of lazyness. Literally the "sweat, blood and tears" quote came to mind.
If I recall an interview of him, he said that each panel needed to be an artwork like a painter does for his canvas. I don't think it was just an expression :p
His art belongs in a museum, like you can't say something like this isn't on the same level as some legendary artists of the past like da vinci. Edit: I get y'alls point, I just meant Da Vinci's artistic values, I know he was much more than that.
Da vinci wasn't just a painter tho, he was also a mathematician, architect, statue carver, philosopher, physician and a chemist. So it really isnt fair to just compare these 2
Yall going to far comparing these two , Vinci was not just a normal painter but way more than this he was literally a genius . if you did just a little research you will know the difference between these two .....
i can relate to that last look he made of seeing something you just drew and immediately finding something that you don't like, even though people wont realize it, it would stick with you every time you see the drawing/painting.
5:09 - Original text translation (I used Google Translate) For the first time, I faced a picture that I had been drawing while standing on top of it. it was a strange feeling I couldn't see it anyway She thought that there would definitely be some parts that needed to be reworked (although she actually thought so in her head), The picture I made looked like something I shouldn't touch anymore after that. I felt like it wasn't mine anymore Come to think of it, the whole time I was drawing this, I didn't get angry at all. After finishing drawing, I don't feel strangely "I did it myself" Thank you again for your valuable experience. Takehiko Inoue Excerpt from 2009.11.05 INOUE NEWS (original text) それまで上に乗っかって描いていた絵と、初めて正対した 不思議な気持ちだった 何せ引きで見ることができなかったのだから 必ず手直しをしなくてはならない箇所があるだろうと思っていたが(実際頭でそう考えた箇所はあったが)、 立てた絵はそれ以後もう僕が手を入れるべきものではないように見えた すでに僕のものではないような気がした 思えばこれを描いている間中、ほとんど心がとがることがなかった 描き終えて、不思議なほど「自分で成し遂げた」という感じがない またまた貴重な経験をさせていただきまして有難うございます。 井上雄彦 2009.11.05 INOUE NEWSより抜粋
I’d seen Inoue’s art before and been impressed but I had no idea he’d ever worked at this massive scale. absolutely incredible display of skill and dedication to his craft. I love watching artists work like this-whatever he’s doing now, I hope he’s just as satisfied as he seems in this video
Watching him work is in itself an inspiration to seek something bigger that can fill my soul. Every time I feel lost I come back to this video to get me back on track.
I got chills when they show the finished painting for the first time. That imagery of Musashi enveloped by that evil aura with his right hand reaching out for the light is so powerful.
There is a reason why takehiko is so definition with his art, willpower, sweat, humanity, fun with drawing, repetition, life calling to himself, wanting to leave himself here, and just enjoying life as it is, striveing, thats why i respect him!