New Straits Times

Japan anime studio draws on talent of autistic artists

- By AFP

DIAGNOSED with autism, Shoko Sakuma says she struggled working in accounting but now she is putting her childhood love of drawing to work in a special Japanese animation studio.

The groundbrea­king initiative aims to provide job training and confidence to people with autism who can find it hard to cope in Japan’s often highstress and long-hours work environmen­t.

“I was really bad at numbers, which was the first thing that troubled me,” Sakuma said at Shake Hands, her workplace since last year in Kyoto in western Japan.

“I would lose things... Customers’ stuff that is very important that you should never lose,” the softly-spoken 39-year-old said.

With attention deficit hyperactiv­ity disorder (ADHD) and Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), Sakuma says she had problems concentrat­ing on bookkeepin­g and eventually started developing bipolar disorder. Sometimes she couldn’t leave home.

But now she spends her working days at a partitione­d desk — which helps her to focus — adding digital effects to an anime keyframe.

“With my personalit­y, I cannot move onto the next step unless I thoroughly understand every detail.

“Instructor­s here accept me being like that and teach me in a very gentle manner.

“I feel at ease here. I am having fun.”

MORE AWARENESS

Developmen­tal disabiliti­es like ASD were long considered a mere matter of personalit­y in Japan, but scientific studies have helped raise public awareness and change public policy.

In 2004, Japan passed a law recognisin­g conditions such as ASD, ADHD and learning disabiliti­es, and mandated schools to detect and support children requiring special care.

It also widened the remit for socalled “Type B” facilities, workplaces which previously catered only to those with conditions like Down syndrome and which now number some 16,000.

Launched last year, Shake Hands does so with anime, an industry that with the likes of Ghibli studios (“Spirited Away”) is a major success story for Japan.

Instructor Yuki Kawai said obstacles in other settings can be an asset in animation.

“’An animation movie is constructe­d on what is called a time-sheet, a blueprint which commands every move of characters,” Kawai, 28, said.

“There are no abstract rules in creating animations... which is easy to understand for people like us.”

TERRIBLE ACCIDENT

Kawai himself was diagnosed with ADHD after graduating from art and design school and the “terrible accident” of a first job in sales.

“Often I couldn’t get up in the morning or couldn’t get to the office on time,” he said. “I couldn’t handle phone calls because many times I couldn’t get the person’s name right.”

Such an experience for people with ASD can trigger mental health problems, said Yuji Umenaga, a Waseda University professor and specialist in mental health and learning difficulti­es.

“Many people who visit me have shown symptoms of depression,” he told AFP, adding that some people with ASD become depressed because their symptoms make it hard.

“Anti-depressant medicines don’t work for them because, in the case of ASD, the trigger is its symptoms which make relationsh­ips with bosses and colleagues difficult,” he said.

WONDERFUL POTENTIAL

Shake Hands has provided animation sequences for several blockbuste­r films and has won an order from a Malaysian firm to produce a promotiona­l anime movie.

In the studio, upbeat music plays in the background to help make the 10 or so employees comfortabl­e.

“In a quiet environmen­t, some people get sensitive about other people chatting, thinking they might be the subject of their talking,” said staff member Momoka Tsuji.

Workers, who earn a nominal salary, are reminded to take hourly breaks and people can start and stop whenever they like, even late into the night.

“Some of our colleagues don’t feel comfortabl­e for having direct conversati­ons, so we communicat­e through an intranet chat function,” said Tomoya Sawada, 34, head of the animation studio.

Professor Umenaga hopes that Shake Hands will inspire other initiative­s along the lines of Exceptiona­l Minds, a US animation studio in Hollywood that provides vocational training for autistic students.

“In order to help their wonderful potential shine, we need to provide the right environmen­t for them, from childhood schooling to vocational training,” he said.

 ?? AFP PIX ?? The groundbrea­king initiative aims to provide job training and confidence to people with autism who can find it hard to cope in Japan’s often high-stress and long-hours work environmen­t.
AFP PIX The groundbrea­king initiative aims to provide job training and confidence to people with autism who can find it hard to cope in Japan’s often high-stress and long-hours work environmen­t.
 ?? ?? Instructor Yuki Kawai working at the animation studio, Shake Hands, in Kyoto, Japan.
Instructor Yuki Kawai working at the animation studio, Shake Hands, in Kyoto, Japan.
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