KYOTO.- A large-scale solo exhibition of works by Takashi Murakami (b. 1962), an artist at the forefront of contemporary art, will be held at Kyoto City
KYOCERA Museum of Art as it celebrates its 90th anniversary. For Murakami, who has developed his career primarily overseas, this will be his first large-scale solo exhibition in Japan in about eight years and his first outside of Tokyo.
The exhibition Superflat curated and organized by Takashi Murakami toured Japan and the U.S. from 2000 to 2001, and together with the Superflat Manifesto that accompanied it, had a significant impact on the contemporary art scene. The concept not only linked traditional Japanese pictorial expressions with popular contemporary culture represented by anime, manga, and video games, but also considered the sensibility and social aspects of the Japanese people in the postwar period, as well as the capitalist economy, politics, and religion on a flattened plane. By using diverse methods to incorporate this concept into his overall creative process, Murakami has come to create a wide range of works that question the value and essential meaning of art. His career can be seen as an ongoing effort to challenge the international art scene, in which the Western values have become the accepted norm, providing new stimulus from a uniquely Japanese perspective.
The exhibition takes place In Kyoto, the city that was a center of activity for Edo period painters in which Murakami has deeply been interested since the beginning of his career, a place where diverse forms of art and performing arts are still very much alive and intermingle. Please look forward to encountering a new world of Murakami in Takashi Murakami Mononoke Kyoto, an exhibition comprising around 170 predominantly new works including newly painted masterpieces, representative series, and works that will be exhibited for the first time in Japan.
Exhibition Highlights: A showcase of new and premiere works by Takashi Murakami, who confronts the theme of Kyoto head-on!
Murakami, who majored in nihonga (Japanese-style painting) at university, has been greatly influenced by the painters of the Edo period and has incorporated them into his own work. It is no exaggeration to say that this is the origin of Superflat, evident not only in his pictorial expression but also in his production methods and the Kaikai Kiki studio system. This exhibition features a large number of new works shown for the first time in Japan, in which Murakami uniquely interprets, references, and reconstructs exemplary works by painters who were active in Kyoto during the Edo period.
13-meter-long Murakami version of masterpiece Rakuchu Rakugai Zu welcomes visitors
Rakuchu Rakugai Zu Byobu or Scenes In and Around Kyoto (Funaki Version) (Edo period, 17th century) by Iwasa Matabei depicts various scenes of Kyoto, including shrines and temples, festivals and entertainment districts, and people enjoying Kabuki and Joruri (traditional Japanese puppet plays). A thirteen-meter-long contemporary Rakuchu Rakugai Zu, painted by Murakami while referencing the original, will welcome visitors to the exhibition.
Murakamis version of The Wind and Thunder Gods and Dragon and Clouds challenge the most unorthodox of painters of the Edo period!
In addition to the above-mentioned Rakuchu Rakugai Zu, this exhibition features the eighteen-meter-long Dragon in Clouds - Red Mutation: The version I painted myself in annoyance after Professor Nobuo Tsuji told me, "Why dont you paint something yourself for once?" (illustration 1) shown for the first time in Japan in which Murakami took on Soga Shohakus Dragon and Clouds (18th century), a work that had a deep impact on him. In addition, the new Murakami version of Tawaraya Sotatsus The Wind and Thunder Gods (National Treasure, 17th century), a representative work of the Rimpa school, will surprise viewers with its humor!
The origin of Heian-kyoMurakamis depiction of divine beasts of antiquity and the Rokkaku Rasendo bell tower
Surrounded by mountains, rivers, and ponds and protected by the Four Deities (Blue Dragon, White Tiger, Vermillion Bird, and Black Tortoise) that symbolize the four cardinal directions, Heian-kyoa former name given to Kyotowas considered an ideal place. In this exhibition, a new work by Murakami with these divine beasts as its motif will be shown on four walls surrounding Murakamis version of Heian-kyo. The Rokkaku Rasendo (tentative English title) bell tower rises in the center of the space to ward off the disturbing presence of wandering mononoke, or evil spirits.
The comings and goings of Mr. DOB and the evolution and amplification of Murakamis characters
Murakamis signature character Mr. DOB first appeared in 1994. With manga and video game characters as its motif, Mr. DOB is an ever-changing figure that has plugged into various contexts. (Illustration 7) Morphing into the monster Tan Tan Bo, then into an extreme form of Murakami self-portrait, Gero Tan, and then back again into Mr. DOBwhile tracing the comings and goings of Mr. DOB, a character that has embodied Murakamis concept of Superflat, this exhibition will also showcase new characters depicted on shaped canvases, as well as various new works that reference popular culture, such as Murakamis animated films and trading cards. Are they the mononoke of our time!?
The essence of Kyoto that attracts people from all over the world
Kyoto is a serene city with a history of more than 1,000 years that is colored with traditional events throughout the changing seasons. The exhibition features numerous works shown for the first time that take inspiration from Kyotos traditional culture, such as the Gion Festival, Gozan Okuribi bonfires, tea ceremony, and ikebana flower arrangement, as well as literary works themed around Kyoto. Takashi Murakami will guide visitors to this ancient capital!
NEWS
Presenting of the original artwork for the iwai-maku, a stage curtain that caused a sensation at the name succession production of Ichikawa Danjuro XIII, Hakuen!
The iwai-maku, a special celebration curtain that adorned the stage to announce Ichikawa Ebizos name succession to Ichikawa Danjuro XIII, Hakuen, garnered much attention at the name succession production held in 2022 at Kabukiza Theatre in Tokyo. The iwai-maku was realized at the request of film director Miike Takashi, who asked Murakami, while shooting a documentary film about Ichikawa Danjuro XIII, to create a portrait of a contemporary Kabuki actor by a contemporary painter. It is scheduled to be unveiled in Kyoto at the Minamiza Theatre in Kyoto from December 1 to 24 this year.
This exhibition will feature the original painting for the said iwai-maku titled 2020 The Name Succession of Ichikawa Danjūrō XIII, Hakuen, Kabuki Jūhachiban, a lively and vivid depiction of The Eighteen Kabuki Masterpieces.
Takashi Murakami
Born in Tokyo in 1962, Takashi Murakami completed his doctorate at Tokyo University of the Arts in 1993. His doctoral dissertation was titled The Meaning of the Nonsense of the Meaning. In 2000, he proposed the concept of Superflat as a form of contemporary culture that makes reference to the state of Japanese society by linking traditional Japanese art with the flatness of anime and manga. In 2001, he founded Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. and serves as its representative. In 2005, his exhibition Little Boy (Japan Society, New York) was awarded the Best Thematic Museum Show by the American branch of the International Association of Art Critics. In 2015, he received the 66th Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology Award for Fine Arts from the Agency for Cultural Affairs. Recent solo exhibitions include Stepping on the Tail of a Rainbow (The Broad, LA, 2022), MurakamiZombie (Busan Museum of Art, Busan, 2023), Understanding the New Cognitive Domain (Gagosian, Le Bourget, 2023), and Takashi Murakami: Unfamiliar People Swelling of Monsterized Human Ego (Asian Art Museum, San Francisco, 2023).