Pixiv Girls Collection 20107 min read
Reading Time: 4 minutesThis is an odd way to describe an art book, but Pixiv Girls Collection 2010 is a lot of fun. It’s enjoyable to look through, and you can go to the artist’s Pixiv page immediately and see more art work. This time they’ve included the Pixiv artist ID number next to each illustration in addition to the name.
The cover illustration is by SIRO, whose work also appeared a few times in the previous book. From looking around, it doesn’t seem like this artist has published works outside of Pixiv. Under the slip cover is a monochrome work by Aki which may go unnoticed.
The introduction page includes Pixiv’s mission statement about the goal of the art book in Japanese, English, Korean and Chinese. It’s cool in that they really acknowledge their audience has become international, and mention it. “In the 2nd edition book, a lot of artworks by people all over the world, not only Japan, have been appeared. If you cannot communicate because of our language difference, our artworks are common language, and we believe that we all share the joy of drawing pictures, creating art. And we also believe that the greatest charm of Pixiv is exactly that.“
And on to the art work! Though it may seem random, there is some order to the presentation of illustrations. Some of the subtopics are original, girls, glasses, maid uniforms, Alice in Wonderland, Halloween, fantasy, mecha, etc. There is some overlap, along with pictures in sections that don’t seem to meet any of those themes.
Some of the ‘Alice in Wonderland‘ theme that I mentioned earlier above. I was a bit surprised to see art by Coffee Kizoku, but it’s a lovely piece. I’m also really digging the all-girl rock band by Kajiki.
I really think Pixiv listened to its critics: There are a ton of full page illustrations this time. For the most part, when they’re not full page, they’re at least half a page. That is a real difference from the first Pixiv Girls Collection where many illustrations were placed three to a page. That in addition of the inclusion of the ID numbers pretty much makes it perfect.
Pixiv Girls Collection 2010 is a thick 162 pages in length and A4 in size. Art work stops at page 157 so there isn’t a lot of filler. With so many artists to choose from, they couldn’t really go wrong… The illustration on the bottom right (above) is by Nardack, a Korean artist with a healthy following of fans worldwide.
The last Pixiv art collection included a much greater number of professional artists. By that I mean artists you’d know of without the help of Pixiv, like Kozaki Yuusuke, Koutaro, HUKE, and redjuice. And though it may all just be my imagination, it really does feel like a fresher collection.
Many of the art works in the latter half of the book are from themed Pixiv events. Even within the themes, there is a lot of creativity and art works that you wouldn’t always expect. So basically, Pixiv Girls Collection 2010 is a great art book. It’s just hundreds of art works handpicked from among maybe millions. It also makes for a great guide to start navigating Pixiv, for those who don’t want to sort through everything.
- Title: Pixiv Girls Collection 2010
- タイトル: ピクシブガールズコレクション2010
- Release Date: 02/27/2010
- Pages: 162