![]() |
From Mars by Fuyumi Soryo |
This is another repost--one of my favorites to write--
Granted, what makes good art is somewhat subjective (though not entirely: whether or not I like Picasso may be subjective; Michelangelo's David is great art). However, I have noticed certain criteria popping up again and again in my summer manga reading, namely three:
1. Good manga art gets the proportions right WHEN REQUIRED.
![]() |
Friberg |
You will see the type I prefer by the manga examples I post.

I've been reading manga where I've suddenly yelled, "Look, most people's fingers fall below the middle of their thighs. NOBODY'S ARMS LOOK LIKE THAT WHAT YOU'VE DRAWN! Have you never heard of the Golden Ratio!?"
2. Better than usual manga captures motion.
Motion is actually terrifically difficult to do--consequently, much manga falls into two categories (1) beautiful "pauses"; (2) motion.




Those who employ motion, such as the skilled Matoh, will often produce mixed work within a single manga. Compare the three pictures to the left. The one in the middle is off. The other two are beyond excellent. (Matoh does proportional motion better than any manga artist I've encountered.)
Those who employ the pause technique can produce lovely and heartrending stuff. Fuyumi Soryo of Mars and Eternal Sabbath creates stunningly beautiful images (see opening image above.) Although the pieces are more set, they do signal a sense of immediacy: a camera still rather than an oil painting.
Those who employ the pause technique can produce lovely and heartrending stuff. Fuyumi Soryo of Mars and Eternal Sabbath creates stunningly beautiful images (see opening image above.) Although the pieces are more set, they do signal a sense of immediacy: a camera still rather than an oil painting.
The difficulty of manga art is that it needs to be more like the first rather than the second, no matter what art class tells you.
"L" from Death Note |
3. The manga art conveys emotion.
Emotion is the most important criteria.

Soryo captures young male insouciance at its most quintessential (see above).


Like Maximus from Tangled, a well-drawn manga character can look deadpan or excited, sad or happy, and even exasperated!
A picture in manga doesn't convey a thousand words--it conveys a thousand states of mind.