CNApp, a tool for the quantification of copy number alterations (2020)

Here are just a few things to expect from Juan Gotoh New:

If you are an aspiring animator, a student of visual storytelling, or simply a fan tired of cookie-cutter isekai, Juan Gotoh’s new work is essential viewing. Mark your calendars for Fall 2026. And in the meantime, watch Spectral Shift again—you’ll notice that even his old work pointed toward this strange, gorgeous, fragmented future.

For this new body of work, Gotoh has turned exclusively to kozo (Japanese mulberry paper) and natural, hand-ground pigments sourced from the Andes. The result is a dramatic departure from his previously slick, almost digital aesthetic. The new pieces are fragile, translucent, and layered—revealing torn edges, embedded plant fibers, and what appears to be gold leaf applied in erratic strokes.

Limited physical copies found in specialized Japanese subculture stores. Serious collectors hunting down vintage print tankōbon. ⚠️ A Critical Warning for Readers

Their locking tremolo studs provide a solid, no-wiggle foundation that outperforms many competitors.

Utilizing distinct, heavily inked lines to convey intense emotional states, ranging from euphoric madness to absolute existential dread.

For dedicated collectors tracking new listings, secondary markets like the Mandarake Auction platform frequently update with "newly surfaced" legacy items, including hand-signed books and original production illustrations ( shikishi ) featuring his older works like Incest Family or Oneshota . Legacy vs. Modern Distribution

International collectors verifying standard bibliography details.