Arina Tanemura 30th Anniversary Exhibition Opens in Osaka

Arina Tanemura's 30th anniversary exhibition opened its Osaka run on June 19, 2026, giving one of shojo manga's most recognizable modern artists a new stop on a three-city museum-style tour. According to the official exhibition site and the current ticket page, the Osaka venue runs through July 20 at Space Gratus inside the Animate Osaka Nipponbashi Annex. For fans who missed the Tokyo dates earlier this spring, this is now the main chance to see the anniversary show before it moves on to Kyoto later in the summer.
The exhibition is built around Tanemura's 30th year as a professional manga artist. In a January 21, 2026 press release, Animate Holdings said Tanemura debuted in 1996 in Ribon and described Kamikaze Kaito Jeanne as a major hit with more than 6 million copies in circulation. The same release positions the anniversary event as a wide look back at the artist's career, which also includes works such as Full Moon o Sagashite, The Gentlemen's Alliance Cross, and Sakura Hime Kaden. That background matters because the Osaka opening is not a standalone pop-up. It is the current public phase of a year-long commemorative program built around an author whose work helped define late-1990s and 2000s girls' manga for a large part of the international fan community.
What Was Announced
The new development on June 19 is simple but meaningful: the Osaka leg is now open. The official site lists the local run from June 19 through July 20, 2026, with weekday hours of 11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. and weekend and holiday hours of 10:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. The venue is Space Gratus at Animate Osaka Nipponbashi Annex 3F, and both the official site and ePlus note that final admission is 30 minutes before closing. The same materials show that the Tokyo leg has already ended and that a Kyoto leg is scheduled for August 21 through September 21 at Space Galleria KYOTO.
That itinerary turns the exhibition into something larger than a single-city retrospective. Instead of limiting the anniversary to Tokyo, the organizers are circulating it through three major fan destinations. For overseas readers planning a Japan trip, that changes the practical value of the announcement. The event is no longer something that had to be caught in April or May. It is active now, with another confirmed venue still ahead.
Why It Matters
Tanemura occupies a very specific place in manga history. Her pages are remembered for ornate costume design, jewel-like linework, and heroine-centered fantasy that connected strongly with readers who grew up on late-1990s and early-2000s shojo magazines. Anniversary exhibitions for manga creators are common in Japan, but not all of them travel, and not all of them arrive with the same sense of cross-generational recognition. A 30th anniversary framed this way signals that Tanemura's body of work is being presented not just as nostalgia, but as a continuing part of manga culture worth revisiting in person.
The Osaka stop also matters because the exhibition format turns reading history into physical space. Even when official organizers do not spell out every display component in advance, an author retrospective of this kind usually matters to fans because it gathers visual material, commemorative goods, and a career narrative in one place. The official announcement emphasizes that the exhibition is packed with 30 years' worth of what readers have loved about Tanemura's work. That promise is broad, but it aligns with the scale fans expect from a major anniversary show rather than a small merch-only event.
Context for International Fans
For readers outside Japan, Tanemura is part of the generation of manga artists whose work traveled through anime adaptations, imported tankobon, scanlation-era fan communities, and later digital rediscovery. Kamikaze Kaito Jeanne and Full Moon o Sagashite in particular became gateway titles for many overseas shojo fans. An exhibition like this therefore functions on two levels. Locally, it is an event tied to Japan's physical fan spaces. Internationally, it is also a reminder of how much of global manga fandom was shaped by artists whose peak print years came before today's streaming-driven anime boom.
The Osaka venue is also easier to understand than many temporary Japanese events because the official materials are concrete. The site lists exact dates, hours, venue names, and the already scheduled Kyoto continuation. For travelers, that kind of clarity matters more than hype. It means a fan can plan around a real exhibition window instead of waiting for a vague "coming soon" announcement. It also shows how Japanese pop-culture events often extend the life of a milestone by moving through different cities rather than treating one opening day as the whole story.
What Happens Next
In the short term, the Osaka run continues until July 20, 2026. After that, the official site says the exhibition will move to Kyoto from August 21 to September 21. The January press release also says that updates on exhibit details, ticket information, and commemorative goods will continue through the official website and official social channels. For fans who cannot make Osaka, the most useful next step is to watch the Kyoto leg and any later merchandise or display updates tied to that final stop.
For now, the key point is that the anniversary exhibition has re-entered its public run. On June 19, 2026, the story is not a vague celebration of Tanemura's legacy. It is a live event in Osaka, with a fixed schedule, an official ticket page, and one more confirmed city still to come.
Sources
- Official exhibition site
- ePlus ticket information for the Osaka venue
- Animate Holdings press release announcing the 30th anniversary exhibition
Information was checked on June 19, 2026 at 15:24 JST.
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