1. Katsuji Matsumoto was a Japanese illustrator and shojo manga artist.

1. Katsuji Matsumoto was a Japanese illustrator and shojo manga artist.
Katsuji Matsumoto's illustrations were popular from the 1930s through the 1950s, and he contributed illustrations to numerous popular girls' novels by some of the period's most famous authors, including Yasunari Kawabata and Nobuko Yoshiya.
Katsuji Matsumoto was a prolific illustrator of children's books and created merchandise for babies, small children, and girls.
Katsuji Matsumoto was born in Kobe, the son of Toraji and Ishi Katsuji Matsumoto, but moved with his family to Tokyo at the age of eight.
Katsuji Matsumoto withdrew from Rikkyo at the age of 18 and began attending the.
Katsuji Matsumoto's hope was to eventually make his way to Paris.
Katsuji Matsumoto was rejected for military service because he was flat footed.
Katsuji Matsumoto first ventured into manga in Shojo Gaho, creating a series of illustrated narratives featuring a lively Chinese girl named Poku-chan, which was irregularly published between November 1930 and March 1934.
At around this time, Katsuji Matsumoto took on Toshiko Ueda as an apprentice.
Katsuji Matsumoto could draw in a wide range of styles, from the realistic to the near-abstract, but all of his work was distinguished by clean, almost geometrical lines and a strictly Modern sensibility.
In 1935, Katsuji Matsumoto began to work for the magazine that would become his primary forum,.
In 1932, at the age of 28, Katsuji Matsumoto was wed to Ayako Nimori.
In 1934, Katsuji Matsumoto drew his first full-fledged manga, a 16-page story titled.
Katsuji Matsumoto was one of the most popular and influential illustrators working in girls' media, and he continued to be a popular illustrator through the early 1950s.
Katsuji Matsumoto's characters have an air of intelligence without melancholy, and of cheerful optimism that is never saccharine.
In 1960, Katsuji Matsumoto founded Katsu Productions, which specialized in illustrations for infants and toddlers and designing various infant merchandise.
In 1986, Katsuji Matsumoto suffered the last of a series of strokes, and was hospitalized, never to fully regain consciousness again.
The stylish Katsuji Matsumoto had been famously fastidious throughout his life, and his daughter, Meiko, has written that she was startled to notice that on his hospital bed, where Katsuji Matsumoto lay unconscious and barely responsive, he had been using his remaining good hand to remove the pills that had formed on the old hospital blanket.
Katsuji Matsumoto's cremated remains are interred in the Fuji Cemetery in Gotemba, Shizuoka, at the foot of Mount Fuji.