Showing posts with label KaiKai Kiki. Show all posts
Showing posts with label KaiKai Kiki. Show all posts

Takashi Murakami at Gagosian Gallery

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Takashi Murakami has new works on view through August 5th at the Gagosian Gallery.

I wish there were more detailed photographs of each of the show pieces, but from what I can tell, the paradox created by Murakami in exhibiting these sexually explicit figures alongside his cute characters is quite fascinating. It's always so enlightening to hear Murakami speak about his work, and I am always interested in his thought processes and ideas.

From the press release:
I think the Japanese male sexual complex originated in the two-dimensional world –animation, games and so on – which then transferred to small three-dimensional sculptures. But before my sculptures Miss Ko (1997) and My Lonesome Cowboy (1998), it had never been represented life-size.
--Takashi Murakami

Gagosian Gallery is pleased to present recent paintings and sculptures by Takashi Murakami.

In his distinctive "Superflat" style, which employs highly refined, traditional Japanese painting techniques and formats to depict a charged mix of historical subject matter, Pop, animé and otaku content within a flattened representational picture-plane, Murakami moves freely within an ever-expanding field of aesthetic issues and cultural inspirations. Parallel to his distinctive toonish formulations of utopian and dystopian themes, he has recollected and revitalized religious and secular narratives of transcendence and enlightenment favoured by non-conformist Japanese artists from the Early Modern era, commonly considered to be counterpart to the Western Romantic tradition. By situating himself within their legacy of bold and lively individualism in a manner that is entirely his own, he revealed himself to be an artist in dialogue with history and very much of his time.

Murakami’s latest group of paintings explores his complex ambivalence to the legacy of cosmopolitan painter Kuroda Seiki, who brought yōga or Western-style painting to Meiji- period Japan. Kuroda broadly promoted the genre of history painting, as well as the validity of the nude figure as a subject for art. Taking Kuroda’s famous triptych, Wisdom, Impression, Sentiment (c.1900), Murakami consciously reclaims it in a new iteration by applying traditional nihonga techniques like gold- and silver-leafing, as well as recasting the realistically rendered nude figures in contemporary manga style. When it was first shown, Kuroda’s work caused great controversy because of its content, however, as Murakami reminds in paintings such as Shunga: Gibbons (2010) and Shunga: Bow Wow (2010), Japan had embraced explicit erotic content in art as early as the twelfth century. By the Edo period, the long-established genre of shunga sought to express a varied world of contemporary sexual possibilities, often referred to as the creation of a “pornotopia,” an idealised, eroticised and fantastical world parallel to contemporary urban life. In Murakami’s contemporary shunga, graphic depictions of exaggerated and engorged male and female genitals are set against delirious backgrounds of image and pattern.

This theme continues into sculptures, which feature collaborations with key artists working in Japan’s popular otaku culture including Seiji Matsuyama -- creator of the controversial manga “My Wife is an Elementary School Student” – and BOME, a figure sculptor who previously collaborated on Murakami’s first life-size sculpture, Miss Ko2 (1997), an ebullient Playboy fantasy translated into manga cuteness and proportions. Whereas Nurse Ko2 (2011) relates closely to the earlier sculpture, with its leggy, busty verticality and sexy uniform (right down to a suggestively loaded syringe), 3-Meter Girl (2011) is an absurdist composition that pushes form and content to new extremes. She stands with feet spread wide, her abundant hair roiling around her like an elaborate rococo frame as if to steady her petite body against the whopping pendular breasts whose size and weight threaten to topple her. A monumental cast and highly polished metal penis of towering proportions, Mr Big Mushroom (2011), is a realist, manmade take on the traditional stone lingam. Together with Miss Clam (2011), an inviting metal vagina, it provides an exclamation mark to the enduring obsession with sexuality in contemporary human society.

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Takashi Murakami at the Palace of Versailles

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This just might be the most amazing show to ever be on exhibit in my lifetime. Really. I am not exaggerating. The juxtaposition of Takashi Murakami's work against the backdrop of traditional Versailles is jaw-dropping. Marie Antoinette, meet KaiKai & Kiki. Anyone wanna fly this bunny to France?

Via: The Guardian

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KaiKai & Kiki Join the Macy's Day Parade!

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Thanks to Josh Spear for the heads up on this NY Times article about Takashi Murakami's KaiKai & Kiki floats in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade! So cool!

Takashi Murakami 'Cosmic Blossom' collection for Louis Vuitton

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Not surprisingly, Takashi Murakami has created another fabulous collection for Louis Vuitton. Aside from the 'Cosmic Blossom' clothes and accessories- check out the store design! How do I get that giant sleepy panda?

Photos via: High Snobiety

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Aya Takano : Reintegrating Worlds



Better late than never I suppose... but if you want to check out this new Aya Takano exhibit in New York you better hurry- it ends December 12th!

One of my favorite artists in the KaiKai Kiki artist collective is Aya Takano. Her now show, Reintegrating Worlds, at Skarstedt Gallery, looks absolutely stellar.

Excerpt from the press release:
Skarstedt Gallery is pleased to announce Reintegrating Worlds, the first New York solo exhibition by Japanese artist Aya Takano. The show is comprised of fifteen new paintings, all created this year for the exhibition.

In her latest body of work, Takano continues to develop her own unique visual style by combining traditional Japanese imagery with those derived from science fiction, as well as impressions of modern Japan. More specifically, many of the works in Reintegrating Worlds are inspired by the cultures of the Amami Oshima Islands off the coast of Southern Japan and the ancient Ainu people. Derived from the traditions of these early hunter-gathering societies, Takano’s paintings depict images of figures, animals and sea creatures interacting together in a highly imaginative landscape. Her signature long-limbed young girls are still evident levitating in space and participating in ritualistic activities that are both erotic and utopian.

Says Takano, “Lately, I’ve come to live in closer proximity to animals and the feeling hit me suddenly that humans and animals used to be much closer – we depended on them for food, shelter, and transport, or at the very least shared those things with them. There used to be more of them around us.”

Takano incorporates indigenous motifs informed by photographs from Sakyo Komatsu’s field guide of the world’s ethnicities. Adorned with tribal masks, headdresses, and tattoos, the figures display vestiges of primal customs and rituals as they are swimming, playing, and working in nature. As in her earlier works, Takano’s new paintings express particular moods in a cartoon-like manner as the figures lack anatomical details, as well as due to the painting’s continually shifting perspective. Each scene is overflowing with symbolic details and folkloristic aspects derived from a range of sources, which Takano has integrated seamlessly together, continuously evolving her own unique pictorial language.



Takashi Murakami Paints Self Portraits



Oh, Takashi Murakami. Your work makes me swoon. I just love all KaiKai, and Kiki, and... well, everything you make really.

Takashi Murakami has a new show, Takashi Murakami Paints Self-Portraits, which will be held at the Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin in Paris from September 15th through October 17th. Oh, how I wish I could go!

Via: Freshness


Aya Takano Documentary




I'm a huge fan of the KaiKai Kiki artist Aya Takano, and I was really excited to find these documentaries on YouTube. Her work is just gorgeous.

Pretty is as Pretty Does



KaiKai Kiki
artist Chiho Aoshima is part of a group show at the SITE Santa Fe Art Space entitled "Pretty is as Pretty Does". Based on the phrase "pretty is as pretty does", used to describe a pretty girl with a nasty dispostion, the artists in this show manage to make superficially beautiful images with haunting undertones.

There's a lot of art that I am especially drawn to that would fit in this theme (the work of Junko Mizuno or Mizna Wada come to mind) and I'd love to see this exhibition in person!

Pretty is as Pretty Does runs through May 10th.

Takashi Murakami's "Inochi"



If you were lucky enough to see Takashi Murakami's travelling ©Murakami show, you probably saw a few versions of his robot boy, Inochi. Aside from some humorous videos featuring Inochi as he umm... heads into adolescence... there were some life size figurines as well.
Inochi is now a toy being produced by Medicom, and while production of the coveted limited edition figures has been delayed, Murakami's "Inochi" opened earlier this month in Japan. He gave a talk about his Inochi character over the weekend, and the Inochi figurines will be on display at the Kaikai Kiki Gallery until Thursday.

Murakami fun fact : aside from being an amazing world renowned artist, he is also a DJ! Every Sunday night since 2002, Murakami has been a DJ on a Tokyo radio station. You can download podcasts of the sessions here!

Chinatsu Ban : "Eating an Elephant One Mouthful at a Time"



I'm sorry for the lack of posting. I moved this weekend! I'm back to work now, and my first post for the week is about my favorite artist, Chinatsu Ban!

Chinatsu Ban has a solo show at the Parco Factory in Tokyo until February 9th. The show is entitled "Eating an Elephant One Mouthful at a Time"

There's not a ton of images from the show that I can find online (which, annoyingly, always seems to be the case with any of her exhibits). The work has changed a lot from her early days, and I wish I could see larger pictures of it.

While researching this show, I was able to find Chinatsu Ban's personal blog, which is filled with beautiful pieces that I haven't seen before. It's in Japanese, and Google Translate definitely isn't doing a very good job translating it for me so I can't decipher much. I'm content to click through the images :)

Here's the press release from KaiKai Kiki about Chinatsu Ban's latest show:
Adorable elephants dressed curiously in underpants. Butterflies, birds, girls and enigmatic twins. Anthropomorphic apples and ice cream cones … In her vivid paintings and drawings, Chinatsu Ban presents us with a multicolored world where the beloved motifs of children and young girls are transformed into mystical characters.
Cute but slightly unnerving, these unique creatures fuse organically with delicately rendered color surfaces, increasing in number like dividing cells. Always at play, they change shape freely, mutating into plant life and other forms.

The most prominent of these recurring characters is the elephant, a presence that, to Ban, brings with it a sense of peace, like a guardian angel. On the other hand are darker elements, like twins and monsters, beings which convey a sense of anxiety. Though her work seems at first glance to possess a fairy tale like quality, beneath the surface of Ban’s pictures is an ever present dread, born from her understanding of the mortality of living things.

The recent birth of Ban’s child, an event which allowed her to experience first-hand the stirrings of new life, has also brought about a change in her work. More decorative, more refined, her new compositions contain scenes of child-birth and the forms of parent and child, among their many images. Within them is the emergence of a world-view that can only be described as a celebration of the cycles of life. Clearly for Ban, there is an effortless link between the creative process and the day to day.
Born in Aichi Prefecture, 1973.

After participating in a series of group exhibitions that began with 2001’s "Yokai Festival" (Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo), Ban held a solo show at the Tomio Koyama Gallery and the Marianne Boesky Gallery in NY. Her giant parent-and-child elephant sculptures, exhibited in New York’s Central park in 2005, were the subject of much discussion. With this solo exhibition, comprised of paintings and drawings that include 6 new large scale works, we hope you get a chance to experience the warm embrace of Chinatsu Ban’s world.



Takashi Murakami @ Art Basel & New Hollywood Animation Studio!



Takashi Murakami created some plush versions of his iconic flower spheres for Art Basel in Miami, and also recently announced plans to open a KaiKai Kiki animation studio in Hollywood!

I am loving the costume he made for himself out of the flowers (check out his green "stem" tights!). I'd also like to be the first to apply for a job at the KaiKai Kiki animation studio opening up in Hollywood next Summer! If you were lucky enough to attend the ©Murakami shows in LA or Brooklyn, you probably saw the teaser for Murakami's Kai Kai & Kiki character's full length animated film. It had a taste of some of the Miyazaki backgrounds, and Murakami cites him as an influence. I am SO excited to see what amazing projects come out of his new studio!

Via: Supertouch & Hypebeast




KaiKai Kiki Marketplace


If I could win a shopping spree at any store in the whole world, it would be at the KaiKai Kiki Marketplace!


They have the most amazing selection of items from all the KaiKai Kiki artists, including Takashi Murakami, Chiho Aoshima, Aya Takano, Mr., Chinatsu Ban, and others! I want everything! The print selection is the most amazing- with really great prices. Of course, now that I am so excited about buying up everything on the site, I find that they will only ship to Japan. I am going to have to devise a plan to find a friend in Japan that I can have everything shipped to.




Mr. : Nobody Dies


KaiKai Kiki artist Mr. has a new show at Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin in Paris. Mr.'s work is never what it seems. From the surface, you would think his manga and anime inspired characters are cute and innocent, but they are usually portrayed in a sexual or adult context. Oftentimes, he plays with their sexuality, and the young girls will have large male genitalia, or the little boys will have breasts. My favorite part of his work is usually the eyes- sometimes he paints whole other worlds in his characters eyes. I'm sure this show will delve even deeper into the 'children in adult circumstances' theme.