At the beginning of June we were in Chicago celebrating- family
birthdays, a new job, a new business opportunity, and summer. There is a lot of discord in America these
days. Conversation across the country
among friends and family is rife with controversy and misgivings. You couldn’t prove it by us during that trip.
We stayed in a good old (new to us) hotel with a rooftop bar,
the Rafaelo, saw the kids, met up
with friends, and laughed a lot. It was good
to get away after a long time going nowhere.Close to the hotel was the Museum of Contemporary Art. They had an exhibition by a crazy and famous Japanese artist named Takashi Murakami, a person about whom my wife and I knew little. Both my son and daughter told us about him. We had visited our daughter in Japan when she taught English there and developed a special feeling for the country and its art. If we saw his stuff on that trip we don’t remember. His big and outlandish art overwhelmed the small museum behind the Water Tower. My son and I saw Jeff Koons’ amazing stuff at the MCA years ago. He’s the guy who makes metal look like pillows and balloons, does take offs on pop idols like Michael Jackson, and creates complex 3-D erotic dioramas.
Even though I was then on crutches, Murakami was too good to
miss. Our friends dropped us off there
after lunch in Fulton Market. I traded
my crutches for a complimentary wheelchair and we took our time through the
exhibit.
Takashi Murakami has devoted his life to art. He trained at the Tokyo University of the
Arts with an eye on working in animation and manga, Japanese comics. In the end however he earned a Ph.D. in Nihonga,
the traditional art of Japanese painting.
It didn’t take long for him to become dissatisfied with tradition. The world was changing fast and Japan, in his
mind, changed much too slowly.
Takashi Murakami is a star of the modern art world. He’s an international big deal. I vaguely knew he devised cartoon like pop
figures, worked with Kanye West, Pharrel Williams, and Louis Vuitton, doing crossover work into commercial media. But he is anything but one dimensional. Murakami’s art, like all good work, changes
over time.
Writing about visual artists is a fairly pointless exercise. It’s like newspaper music reviews, trying to find
words to describe sound. If you want to
understand music you have listen to it.
If you want to understand visual art, specifically Takashi Murakami’s
art, you have to see it.
That being said, let me give this a try.
Takashi Murakami believed contemporary Japanese art had for
too long done little more than adapt to Western trends. His early work reflected sharp criticism and
satire of his modern island nation’s society.
He was one of the first to develop his own pop icon, Mr. DoB, a sort of alter ego which appears in his work over and
over.
He sought to break down the barrier between high and low culture
and its respective art, the divide between art galleries and commercial design,
and created art that defied categorization. Like this plastic sculpture, Cosmos Ball.
Murakami’s art is noted for its use of color. It incorporates motifs that could be
described as cute, psychedelic, or satirical.
Among his best known and often used elements are smiling flowers,
mushrooms, skull, Buddhist iconic characters, and devotees of obsessive
interests, known in Japan as ‘otaku.”.
In 2000, Murakami published his “Superflat” theory for an
exhibition he curated for the Museum of Contemporary Art.Los Angeles. He contends there is a legacy of flat, two
dimensional imagery from Japanese manga and anime which differs from the west
in its emphasis on surface and use of flat panes of color. It is also a comment on how post war Japanese
society which has flattened, creating little difference between high and low
social classes and their art. For
Murakami this meant packaging elements of his expensive high art works as
merchandise, plush toys and t shirts, making them available at more affordable
prices.
It all paid off for Murakami. He created a production workshop, the Hiropon
Factory, to work on a larger scale and create a diverse array of media. There he works with art students and apprentices,
creating pencil designs which are enlarged digitally, approving colors, putting
to work an army of artists creating huge canvases and massive sculptures.
His first retrospective traveled from LA to Brooklyn, then
from Frankfurt to the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao Spain. In 2008, Murakami was named one of Time
magazine’s “100 most Influential people”, the only visual artist included. He was the third artist ever to exhibit at
the Palace of Versailles.
In 2012, Murakami opened an exhibit in Doha, Qatar titled
Murakami Ego, showing old works alongside new art. Among the new art was a 100 meter long wall
painting dedicated to the suffering of the Japanese people after the Fukushima
nuclear disaster, its second devastating nuclear incident after the twin US
inflicted bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
It features varied individual depictions of arhats, or Buddhist saints.
Arhats are perfected persons who traditionally began as monks. Their spiritual journey is complete. They will
not be reborn through reincarnation, for they have overcome sensuous desire and
ill will, achieving nirvana.
Murakami was profoundly affected by the Fukushima incident,
and created the exhibit and his arhats to bring comfort to Japan. In doing so he came full circle, back to his
traditional training, his Buddhist roots, his spiritual home of sorts.
No pictures of the arhats folks. You have to go the Museum of Contemporary Art
in Chicago to see them properly. They
have soulful eyes, each different from the other, each reaching out to the
viewer. You will find one that touches
you.
And there you go. The
exhibit is open till September 24th.
It’s titled “THE OCTOPUS EATS IT’S
OWN LEG.” That’s an old Japanese folk
tale now disproven. It was believed the octopus
in times of severe hardship or distress eats its own leg, gains nourishment,
and recovers to grow another. Marine biologists
now know that an octopus will eat its own leg, but only when afflicted by a disease
that eventually kills them.
Murakami, like Japanese culture and our own modern western world,
is outrageous and complex. I rolled
through the exhibit in awe, blown away by the power that can be generated by a
visual artist through color, design, and collaboration aimed at insight into the
kinds of lives we live today.
Note: This was
difficult to write. I’m unfamiliar with
the subject, had to do research, and found it difficult to find words that
represented what I was thinking. But then
it was also done alone.
Whereas Takashi Murakami, like Dale Chihuly, the famous one eyed glassblower, creates art with others in
a hub of activity, their productions something of a party, a celebration of art
and expression, writers write alone and in silence. You read their words and stories alone and in
silence. How can collaboration come to
prose and poetry? I’d love to find a
way. If it could work, I would build a
bigger shack. But I have my doubts.
Fantastic...you picqued my octopus loving wanna be writer and artist appetite..am gonna go...Collaborwriting...hmmm..an idea to explore.thanks dave.nancy
ReplyDeleteGlad you liked it. Can I ask how you found my blog?
DeleteAnother great post. Damn it, man; I wish I had more time to explore the Chicago art and music scene. Thanks for bringing Murakami to my attention.
ReplyDeleteGlad you liked it Maureen.
DeleteGood stuff, Dave. We will have to see it. My father brought back some things from Japan in 1945 or so, and many are beautiful art. Keep writing. Jim K.
ReplyDeleteGlad you like it. Is this you Keeley?
ReplyDelete