Authors

tags

Archives

Feeds

  • Loading...

 

NYC///MURAKAMI’S MOMENT…

May 3rd, 2007

01tm.jpg

This week saw the opening of one of NYC’s biggest art “happenings” of the year (”opening” is simply too inadequate a term) when TAKASHI MURAKAMI’s new impressively titled solo show “Tranquility of The Heart, Torment of The Flesh - Open Wide The Eye of The Heart, and Nothing is Invisible” opened at the GAGOSIAN gallery’s swank Madison Avenue branch. Few stars in the art world’s sky burn as brightly as the Japanese wunderkind’s, and this new show of pop eye candy will surely thrill fans and collectors worldwide. Critics might find the master’s repetitive motifs simplistic & redundant but for a Japanese artist working in the Pop realm, the precedent of colorful repetition is a well-established tradition, both culturally and institutionally. Interestingly, in this show, Murakami has departed from his recent motifs of his “DOB” and “MR POINTY” characters and has created a group of monumental portraits of Daruma, the grand patriarch of Zen art. Daruma was an Indian sage who lived during the fifth or sixth century A.D., the founder of Zen Buddhism. Legend has it that he attained enlightenment after sitting in meditation before the wall of the Shaolin monastery for nine years, without blinking his eyes. During this process, his arms and legs atrophied, withered and fell off. In today’s Japan, Daruma’s continuing popularity as the embodiment of resilience and determination has given rise to an entire industry of good luck charms in the form of armless, legless and eyeless dolls, available in endless variations. Murakami’s interpretations of the icon are similarly varied, fusing tradition with a heterogeneous range of artistic and cultural inspirations.

With pricetags that would scare your mother, this show is strictly off-limits to mere mortals but don’t let that be a deterrent. After all, in Murakami’s “Superflat” worldview all is one and one is all and the lines between high and low are practically non-existent. Translation: buying a Murakami toy or other piece of merchandise or printing a high quality copy of a Murakami image should be as good as owning an original piece. Ladies and gentleman, you may start your Epson printers…

“Tell me,” the emperor of China asked Daruma, “What is the first principle of Buddhism?”

“Vast emptiness, nothing holy!” Daruma replied.

“Who are you? the emperor demanded, thoroughly perplexed.

“I don’t know!” Daruma announced, departing as suddenly as he had arrived…

picture32-3.jpg
“That I May Time Transcend, That a Universe My Heart May Unfold,” Acrylic and silver gold leaf on canvas mounted on board 3 panels: 95 1/2″ x 111″, 2007.

daruma-oyako-large.jpg
ICONS OF INSPIRATION: Examples of traditional Japanese Daruma figures kept in the home for luck and protection

524a9410.jpg
Flower Ball (3-D), Kindergarten, acrylic and silver gold leaf on canvas mounted on board,39-1/2″ diameter, 2007.

murak-20070022.jpg

murak-20070019.jpg

murak-20070023.jpg

murak-20070017.jpg

murak-20070010.jpg

murak-20070028.jpg
Above: “Flowers of Joy,” acrylic and platinum leaf on canvas & board, 15 1/2″ diameter each, 2007.

tags
POSTED BY J O'Shea/Editor

One Response to “NYC///MURAKAMI’S MOMENT…”

  1. Supertouch » Blog Archive » POP LIFE///ART IS THE NEW BLING… Says:

    […] (turned blatant imitator) JAY-Z has strategically placed an image of one of Murakami’s recent “Buddha” paintings in the (awful) Hype Williams-directed video for his (weak) new song “Blue Magic,” which […]

Leave a Reply

Features

BEIJING///SUPERTOUCH AT THE OLYMPICS…

bjp44.jpg
With all the mainstream news outlets presenting the “official” view of the 29th OLYMPIC GAMES in Beijing (including computer-generated fireworks and lip-synching 6-year-old body doubles), Supertouch brings you a street level look at the real haps around town from the back alleys to the 798 Arts District, you won’t see anywhere else…

Read Full Article

NYC///ART CRIMES///ESPO UNVEILS “WATERBOARD THRILL RIDE” ON CONEY ISLAND…

espoconey3.jpg

As we previously reported, New York artist STEVE POWERS (aka: ESPO) has been working on a torture-themed art project for a while now and in conjunction with CREATIVE TIME as part of its national public art initiative “Democracy in America: The National Campaign,” he’s just opened the Guantanamo Bay-themed “Waterboard Thrill Ride” on Coney Island in the shadow of the legendary Cyclone roller coaster and Nathan’s hot dog stand in an empty storefront on West 12th Street. When a dollar is fed into a machine standing outside Powers’ mock jail cell installation featuring paintings by the artist inside and out, viewers can climb a short flight of steps to peer through cell bars and view an animatronic torture scene of a hooded jailer pouring water down the throat of an orange jumpsuit wearing Gitmo detainee…

Read Full Article

NYC///FILM///INSIDE THE “BEAUTIFUL LOSERS” MOVIE…

butterfly-400.jpg

Bringing the low-fi art world of BEAUTIFUL LOSERS to the big screen with a full-length documentary on the movement is director and Losers mastermind AARON ROSE, who will debut the film in NYC this Friday, August 8th (aka: 08.08.08) at the IFC CENTER. Presented by NIKE SPORTSWEAR, the film chronicles the lives and creative process of artists including Shepard Fairey, Margaret Kilgallen, Mike Mills, Barry McGee, Jo Jackson, Chris Johanson, Harmony Korine, Stephen Powers, Geoff McFetridge, Thomas Campbell and Ed Templeton, among others, whose DIY attitudes informed the aesthetics and ethos of their generation….

Read Full Article

BOOKSMART///INSIDE PETER BESTE’S “TRUE NORWEIGAN BLACK METAL”…

pbeste41.jpg

For those scratching their heads at the sight of the following images, in the last two decades a bizarre and violent musical subculture called Black Metal has emerged in Norway. It has its roots in a heady blend of splatter movies, heavy metal music, Satanism, Pagan mythology and adolescent angst. In the early-mid 1990’s, members of this extremist underground committed murder, burned down medieval wooden churches, and desecrated graveyards…

Read Full Article

NYC///SOUND & VISION///MUST-SEE SHOW: DAVID BYRNE’S “PLAYING THE BUILDING” INSTALLATION…

byrnepiano11.jpg

Talking Heads founder DAVID BYRNE has had one of the most varied and original careers in rock, constantly vacillating between the worlds of music and visual art with rare grace. Throwing yet another curveball through the rarified air of NYC’s art world, Byrne presents music as art in “Playing the Building,” his new CREATIVE TIME-sponsored 9,000-square-foot, interactive, site-specific installation that transforms the interior of the landmark Battery Maritime Building in Lower Manhattan into a massive sound sculpture that all visitors are invited to sit and “play”…

Read Full Article