Takashi Murakami
“Flower#11245·Jungle camouflage, 2024.
Pigment print and silkscreen on paper. Edition 42/100.
Features a KaiKai Kiki Print embossed seal.
The work is stored and shipped in its original KaiKai Kiki Gallery box.
Framed with museum-grade glass.
Measurements: 50 x 50 cm; 68 x 68 cm (frame).
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DESCRIPTION
TAKASHI MURAKAMI (Tokyo, 1962).
“Flower#11245·Jungle Camouflage, 2024.
Pigment print and silkscreen on paper. Edition 42/100.
Features a KaiKai Kiki Print embossed seal.
The work is stored and shipped in its original KaiKai Kiki Gallery box.
Framed with museum-quality glass.
Measurements: 50 x 50 cm; 68 x 68 cm (frame).
Takashi Murakami’s easily recognizable multicolored “Flowers” motif has become a defining symbol within popular culture. In 1995, the Japanese artist designed the smiling flower, which went on to become an icon of contemporary art. The inspiration for this symbol came to Murakami while he was studying Nihonga at Tokyo University of the Arts. Murakami’s flower motif represents the trauma and collective dark emotions that the Japanese people have continued to experience since the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945.
Murakami is one of the most influential artists of the postwar Japanese generation. Takashi Murakami studied at the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, where he earned a degree in Nihonga (traditional Japanese painting). In 1990, he entered the world of contemporary art with the help of his classmate and friend Masato Nakamura, and in 1993, he created his alter ego, Mr. DOB. He then began to gain recognition both within and outside Japan for his unique synthesis of traditional Japanese art, contemporary Japanese trends (anime, manga…), and American culture, particularly pop culture. In his work, Murakami conveys a critical view of contemporary Japanese society, the legacy of the country’s cultural tradition, its evolution after World War II, and its relationship with the Western world, especially the United States. In his writings, he coined the term “Superflat” to define his personal artistic style—a term that describes work characterized by two-dimensionality and that also critiques the very structure of art, blurring the boundaries between high and low culture. In fact, his body of work spans multiple artistic forms, ranging from painting and sculpture to industrial design, anime, fashion, and other media and merchandise associated with popular culture. His “Superflat” exhibition trilogy (2000, 2002, and 2005) has been shown at major art institutions around the world, including the Parco Gallery in Tokyo, the MOCA in Los Angeles, the Fondation Cartier in Paris, and the Serpentine Gallery in London. Additionally, between 2008 and 2009, retrospective exhibitions were dedicated to him at MOCA, the Brooklyn Museum in New York, and the Museum für Moderne Kunst.
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