02
Main Program
“Doraemon” (Tokyo Midtown) Main Program
- [Date]
- 9/17(Sat) - 9/19(Mon/Holiday)
- [Place]
- Tokyo Midtown
- [Participation fee]
- Free
ARTISTS
Takashi Murakami
Born in Tokyo in 1962.
The originator and proponent of Superflat theory, which
reconstructs Japanese traditional paintings and the origin of
Japanese contemporary art through visual premises of anime and
manga.
Murakami has created numerous characters including Miss Ko2 and
Mr. DOB that reflect the otaku culture and presents them in the
forms of intentionally kitsch sculptures and acutely
two-dimensional paintings antithetical to the Western
perspective techniques. Murakami’s cultural theory based on
subcultures not only deconstructs the highbrow/lowbrow hierarchy
but critically illustrates the post-World War II Japanese
psychology, establishing a discourse unique to Japan in the
increasingly globalizing art scene. The artist continues to
attract a wide-ranging audience beyond contemporary art through
his multifaceted activities including his collaboration with
Louis Vuitton, Kanye West and Drake and focuses on street
culture and contemporary ceramics.
The final installment of his Superflat trilogy of curated
exhibitions, Little Boy: The Arts of Japan’s Exploding
Subculture (New York, 2005), was awarded The Best Thematic
Museum Show in New York by AICA that year.
His first retrospective, ©MURAKAMI (2007 – 2009) toured four
cities in North America and Europe, starting with the Museum of
Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. He has since been holding major
solo exhibitions around the world, including at the Palace of
Versailles (2010), Al Riwaq Exhibition Hall (Doha, 2012), the
Mori Art Museum (Tokyo, 2015), the Garage Museum of Contemporary
Art (Moscow, 2017), and Tai Kwun Contemporary (Hong Kong,
2019).
In recent years, Murakami has taken on NFTs, releasing his
“Murakami.Flowers” and “CLONE X,” a collaborative project with
RTFKT. He received a Special Achievement award at the Webby
Awards in 2022. He has recently held his solo exhibition, An
Arrow through History, at Gagosian in New York, with the two
worlds of digital and the real as its theme.