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Thursday 11 November 2010

Takashi Murakami X G-Shock

One for my G-shock fans out there I know there is a lot of you, unfortunately (joke). Well anyway they drop the G-Shock Frogman by Takashi Murakami in a few days time. The collaboration is launched to celebrate the 40th anniversary of TOKYO FM and will be available in the Basement. Exclusive to Dover Street Market.
No confirmed released date. So if your really on it, I'd give the basement a quick ring sooner rather than later.
Picture 2

cough (for those that don't know about murakami) cough

Murakami's style, called Superflat, is characterized by flat planes of color and graphic images involving a character style derived from anime and manga. Superflat is an artistic style that comments on otaku lifestyle and subculture, as well as consumerism and sexual fetishism. Like Andy Warhol, Takashi Murakami takes low culture and repackages it, and sells it to the highest bidder in the "high-art" market.

Also like Warhol, Murakami makes his repacked low culture available to all other markets in the form of paintings, sculptures, videos, T-shirts, key chains, mouse pads, plush dolls, cell phone caddies, and $5,000 limited-edition Louis Vuitton handbags. This is comparable to Claes Oldenburg, who sold his own low art, high art pieces in his own store front in the 1960s. What makes Murakami different is his methods of production, and his work is not in one store front but many, ranging from toy stores, candy aisles, comic book stores, and the French design house of Louis Vuitton. Murakami's style is an amalgam of his Western predecessors, Warhol, Oldenberg and Roy Lichtenstein, as well as Japanese predecessors and contemporaries of anime and manga. He has successfully marketed himself to Western culture and to Japan in the form of Kaikai Kiki and GEISAI.


Loving bntl like a fat kid loves cake.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

i didnt get the anon hate before but i realise now your a pretentious prick