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Murakami Cushion

Recent Sales

Flower Cushion (Large)
By Takashi Murakami
Located in London, GB
Flowerball cushion Limited Edition Kaikai Kiki Co 39 1/3 inches diameter (1M)
Category

2010s Sculptures

Materials

Textile

Flower Cushion (Medium)
By Takashi Murakami
Located in London, GB
Flowerball cushion Limited Edition Kaikai Kiki Co 23 3/5 inches diameter (60 cm)
Category

2010s Sculptures

Materials

Textile

Panda-chan on a flower cushion, Bouncy Bounce
By Takashi Murakami
Located in Tokyo, JP
Artist: Takashi Murakami Title: Panda-chan on a flower cushion, Bouncy Bounce Year: 2020 Edition
Category

2010s Prints and Multiples

Materials

Screen

Takashi Murakami Flower Plush 30cm (Silver)
By Takashi Murakami
Located in London, GB
'Flowers' by Takashi Murakami x KaiKai Kiki, 2020 Silver colorway. 11.8 Inches diameter. Plush
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Pop Art Sculptures

Materials

Nylon

Plush 60 cm Flower Cushion
By Takashi Murakami
Located in London, GB
24” x 24” 'As new' condition.
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary More Art

Materials

Nylon

Todd Merrill Custom Originals X OLEK, “#Risk” Swivel Throne, USA, 2015
Located in New York, NY
crocheted tables at the Brooklyn Artists Ball honoring Jean Michel Basquiat, Takashi Murakami, and Kiki
Category

2010s American Chairs

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Takashi Murakami for sale on 1stDibs

Japanese contemporary artist Takashi Murakami may be famous among collectors for the psychedelic flowers and chaotic cartoons that populate his prints and paintings, but artists likely know him as the theorist behind the contemporary art movement he calls “Superflat.”

Partially inspired by the Pop art of Andy Warhol, in which celebrity culture and mundane mass-produced items became the focus of bright and colorful works that both celebrated and criticized consumerism, Murakami’s Superflat encompasses painting, sculpture, digital design and more to present a subversive look at consumerism but is also an effort to blend fine art and lowbrow culture.

A multifaceted and remarkably influential artist as well as a compulsive art collector, Murakami has collaborated with brands such as Louis Vuitton, while one of his most famous Superflat works is the teddy bear on the cover of the Graduation album by American rapper Kanye West.

In 1993 Murakami earned his Ph.D. from Tokyo University of the Arts, where he was trained in nihonga, a style of painting that originated in the late 19th century by artists who worked to preserve and promote the conventions and processes associated with traditional Japanese art. While practicing nihonga, Murakami began to realize that his beliefs didn’t align with the tradition, so his art subsequently took on a satirical feel that embodied a critique of the movement. Before long, his style took a drastic turn, embracing otaku, a rising postwar cultural phenomenon among Japan’s younger crowd who loved anime and manga. (Otaku is also integral to Superflat.)

This is when Murakami’s most well-known character, Mr. DOB, was born. This anime-inspired icon, which Americans might interpret as a cross between Walt Disney’s Mickey Mouse and Lewis Carroll’s Cheshire Cat given its pronounced ears and broad and menacing grin, was part of the artist’s endeavor to elevate the otaku subculture but also to target mass consumerism. While Murakami conceived of Mr. DOB years ahead of his 2000-era Superflat theory, there is much common ground between the two. Not unlike his other creations, Murakami’s Mr. DOB is equal parts erotic, disturbing and cartoonish — an incisive mockery of the mingling of commerce and fine art so prevalent in Japanese popular culture.

Find original Takashi Murakami prints, sculptures and other art on 1stDibs.