Jem Yoshioka Explained

Jem Yoshioka
Language:English
Nationality:New Zealander
Genre:Cartoons, illustration
Notableworks:Circuits and Veins
Awards:Supreme Remix Award in 2010 Mix and Mash, first place in the Chromacon New Zealand Indie Arts Festival Comic Awards in 2013 and 2015
Website:Circuits and Veins

Jem Yoshioka (born 1986) is a New Zealand illustrator and comic artist. She has won several comic awards and is best known for her webcomic Circuits and Veins which has attracted a large following on Webtoon.

Biography

Jem Yoshioka is of Japanese and Pākehā heritage. As a young child she was always interested in storytelling and drawing, and as a teenager, she started creating her own stories and worlds. She did not have access to many comics growing up, apart from Tintin, but once she discovered comics on the Internet, she found a whole new way of telling stories.[1]

She grew up in Napier and studied Computer Graphic Design at Whanganui School of Design.[2]  She is a freelance illustrator and also works full-time in the communications industry. She lives in Wellington, New Zealand.

She works in various media, including digital illustration, watercolour and ink work, and soft textiles.

Work

Yoshioka has always been interested in science fiction and fantasy genres and her work, both fiction and non-fiction, circles around themes of belonging, place and heritage.[3] An early influence on her work is Shaun Tan because of how he handled the relationship between words and pictures.[4] Other influences on her work comes from her love of photography, video games, traditional Japanese printmaking, fashion, animation, film, fine art, dance and novels. She began in her teens and early 20s with creating long-form webcomic publishing, but switched to short comics. This allowed her to focus and tell a different type of story.

She has been published in Loop Magazine, Tearaway and World Sweet World, Three Words - the New Zealand Women’s comics anthology[5] and by Square Planet Comics, as well as creating band posters and merchandise. Her work has been published in the New Zealand School Journal.[6]

An Opal Dream Cave, inspired by a poem by Katherine Mansfield of the same name and images from the photograph collection of the National Library, won the Supreme Remix Award in the 2010 Mix and Mash competition. She won first place in the Chromacon New Zealand Indie Arts Festival Comic Awards in 2013 and 2015.[7]

She has published several webcomics, including Circuits and Veins which features two female characters, human and android[8] [9] and has thousands of subscribers and over a million views on the webcomic platform Line Webtoon.

In 2017, Yoshioka's work was featured as part of Satellites, a series of exhibitions across Auckland showcasing contemporary Asian artists.[10]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Interview: Webcomic Creator Jem Yoshioka. Bang. Breanna. 1 August 2018. fangirlnation. 26 January 2019.
  2. Web site: Jem's Remixed Dreams. 9 August 2011. The Big Idea. 26 January 2019.
  3. Web site: Author: Jem Yoshioka. The Pantograph Punch. 26 January 2019.
  4. Web site: 5 minutes with Jem Yoshioka: Comicfest Feature – Library News. en-US. 2019-03-23.
  5. Book: Joyce, Rae, Laing, Sarah and Neville, Indira (eds). Three words: an anthology of Aotearoa/NZ women's comics. Beatnik. 2016. 9780994120502. Auckland. 84–87.
  6. Web site: Something Alive. Yoshioka. Jem. 4 June 2018. TKI: Te Kete Ipurangi. 26 January 2019.
  7. Web site: Jem Yoshioka / Comics, Illustration. Chromacon: New Zealand Indie Arts Festival 2015. 26 January 2019.
  8. Web site: Weekend Listening: Contemporary New Zealand Comics. Kinnaird. Adrian. 30 November 2018. From Earth's End: a New Zealand comics blog. 26 January 2019.
  9. Web site: Contemporary New Zealand comics. 25 November 2018. Radio New Zealand. 26 January 2019.
  10. Web site: Train station a gallery for art. Stuff. 29 May 2017 . en. 2019-03-23.