Takashi Murakami, (born February 1, 1962, Tokyo, Japan), Japanese artist and entrepreneur widely recognized for his ability to adapt the aesthetics of Japanese traditional art to operate within the context of popular culture.
Murakami studied Japanese painting at the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, where he received a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in 1986 and a Ph.D. in 1993. After completing his studies, he increasingly displayed his works in solo and group exhibitions, making his European debut in 1995 in “TransCulture,” held at the 46th Venice Biennale. The following year Murakami’s paintings and sculptures were featured most notably at the second Asia-Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art at the Queensland Art Gallery in Brisbane, Australia.
By 2005 Murakami had been dubbed the Japanese Andy Warhol and had reached a new level of success in his career as artist, curator, product designer, theorist, and entrepreneur. At the Japan Society Gallery in New York City, he curated the exhibition “Little Boy: The Arts of Japan’s Exploding Subculture.” Featuring the work of young Japanese artists, the show examined the otaku (“geek”) movement propelling anime and manga—two industries at the heart of Japanese popular culture. Also in 2005 Murakami displayed his monumental sculpture Tongari-Kun—Mr. Pointy & the Four Guards in Tokyo’s fashionable Roppongi Hills development. This colourful, meticulously crafted work, modeled on a Buddha statue, was the fourth edition of a piece that had charmed many viewers outside Rockefeller Center, New York City, in 2003.
Murakami also proved himself a significant force in the promotion of Japanese art and artists. In 2001 he founded an art production company, Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd., with offices in both Japan and Brooklyn, New York. Through the company Murakami helped many young artists gain international exposure—by mounting exhibits, by producing and selling merchandise, and by organizing a biannual art festival and convention in Tokyo. In 2007 ©MURAKAMI was mounted at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, and it subsequently traveled to a number of other major museums, including the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, in 2009. This retrospective exhibit of Murakami’s artistic activity included not only paintings, sculpture, film, and installation works but also Kaikai Kiki merchandise and fashion products for Louis Vuitton.
In the 2010s Murakami’s work demonstrated a shift from clean plasticized figures of smiling flowers and impish characters to chaotic compositions of skulls and beastly forms. The artist often attributed the change to the Japan earthquake and tsunami of 2011, but it may also have been a result of a yearslong dialogue that he fostered with Japanese art historian Nobuo Tsuji, whose work on artists from the Edo period had inspired Murakami at the beginning of his career. Murakami’s subjects from this period often evoke Japanese religion, folklore, and art history. Notable pieces included the multi-paneled painting 100 Arhats (2013)—in Buddhism, an arhat is one who has reached the state of enlightenment—and large-scale sculptures of demons, Embodiment of “A” and Embodiment of “Um” (both 2014).
In 2013 Murakami released his first feature film, Mememe no kurage (Jellyfish Eyes), in Japan. His work was frequently exhibited internationally, including at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, and at the Museum of Fine Arts Boston (both in 2017). Murakami also continued to collaborate with high-profile names, notably fashion designer Virgil Abloh and musician Kanye West (whose 2007 album, Graduation, featured cover illustration by Murakami).