Skip to main content

Juliana Yu Prompt #1

Takashi Murakami has become a household name. He’s one of today’s biggest contemporary artists and has found success in high art by incorporating what has long been considered low culture, maintaining a balance of intellectual complexity in his works with visuals pulling from otaku culture, a culture of passion for anime and manga. He succeeds most in popular culture in providing accessibility to these low forms of culture and to his own work among mass markets.

One of his most successful pieces in these realms is the album cover he created for Kanye West’s Graduation, which explores themes of student life and life after fame. The content of the album cover itself plays off the dreaminess and idealization within these themes. The vivid colors and animated composition inspired by anime and manga draw us in by evoking our youthful optimism and shared experience of transitional period chaos.

Murakami began his art career as a traditionalist, working in Nihonga, a painting style following traditional Japanese artistic conventions and aesthetic preferences from Western art. He became disillusioned with its complacency and Western focus, and he responded by experimenting with contemporary art and setting out to find the “secret of market survivability - the universality of characters" (Howe, 2003). He was therefore interested in the lasting prevalence of otaku culture, tying it inextricably to his style. He has since received high acclaim in high contemporary art spheres and attained this “market survivability” with enduring characters like Mr. DOB.

The style of the album cover and his other work relies on “Superflat,” the postmodern art movement he founded that is heavily influenced by otaku culture. He comes full circle, taking inspiration from low culture into high art spaces, and bringing his success back to pop culture with this project. He operates under the postmodern culture definition put forth by Storey (2009) as “a culture which no longer recogn­izes the distinction between high and popular culture” (p. 13). His heritage has especially informed this perspective, as he references that, "The Japanese don't really have a difference or hierarchy between high and low" (Adam, 2003). Given his success in high art spheres, his work rejecting such hierarchy contributes to diminishing this discrepancy that is prevalent in Western culture and that attempts to discount anime and manga as lower than other media.

The commercial nature of Murakami’s work is also a key characteristic and goal of his distinct style. The idea of market survivability is such a driving force, that I would argue that Murakami’s postmodern art represents the “final victory of commerce over culture” (Storey, 2009, p. 13). The gap between high and low culture for Murakami is closing because he recognizes survival in the mass market as his ultimate end. Furthermore, we see Murakami’s art as a part of “hopelessly commercial culture. It is mass produced for mass consumption. Its audience is a mass of non-discriminating consumers. The culture itself is formulaic, manipulative” (p. 8). He celebrates commerce with his work, aiming to flood the market with market-surviving merchandise—from paintings to designer handbags to plastic figurines—at various price levels, to maintain a sense of wide-reaching accessibility that lends itself to mindless consumption. Murakami has reached these mass markets through Graduation’s success, as his work with Kanye and sale of cheap merchandise make him accessible to the general public. In this way, Murakami also succeeds in his goal of more broadly bridging cultures—high and low, East and West.

Art medium plays a crucial role in his accessibility, as well. He digitally paints many of his works to be disseminated digitally and as physical merchandise. Benjamin (1936) would, however, question the authenticity of his art, particularly in its widely accessible forms. Technology has fundamentally reshaped art in two ways: ​​“process reproduction is more independent of the original than manual reproduction” in augmentation, and “technical reproduction can put the copy of the original into situations which would be out of reach for the original itself” in distribution (p. 50). How can I be sure that the smiling flower figurine on my desk represents the same intellectual intentions Murakami had while conceptualizing it? At the same time, the fact that I have this absurdly happy character in my possession demonstrates Murakami’s blurring of lines between high and low culture and celebration of commerce and culturally integrated markets.

There is also the question of aura, which I would argue has evolved in today’s digital landscape. Graduation had no original physical aura, or “The here and now of the artwork—its unique existence in a particular place” (Benjamin, 1936, p. 51). Benjamin argues that the rise of technology and mechanical reproduction has stripped away the role of this physical, environmental aura in art. However, I find that Murakami’s art as a digital painting and its distribution reliant on the album itself have forced the concept of aura to evolve. It relies on the album’s music to generate context rather than physical existence in a particular place. There is no domain of tradition, but the digital space and nature of listening become the aura and new digital traditions emerge. Benjamin also never got the chance to encounter many of the new forms of art, so does not consider artists like Murakami who create their works digitally and require mechanical reproduction to reach an audience at all. Would digital art, then, be complete removal from aura? Does an artwork’s physical aura—the value of which may be rooted in classist ideas of who has the resources to access art—trump the widespread availability of that artwork?

Ultimately, Murakami’s incorporation of the historically low culture of cartoons and anime into his highly successful contemporary artwork bridges the gap between high and low culture and celebrates its subsequent commercialization. There remain questions about his Graduation album cover’s authenticity given its inevitable fall to the commercial and its reshaping of the aura. But in the words of Murakami, perhaps we’re being swept up in “the ​​tornado that spins with the zeitgeist” of new times (“Sound & Vision: Kanye West's ‘Graduation’ by Takashi Murakami”, 2019).

References

Adam, J. P. (2018, March 08). High and Low: Enduring Influence of Japanese Anime in Contemporary Art. Retrieved from https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/high-low-enduring-influence-japanese-anime-art-jenny-park-adam/

Benjamin, W. (1936). The work of art in the age of mechanical reproduction. Visual Culture: Experiences in Visual Culture.

Howe, J. (2003, November 01). The Two Faces of Takashi Murakami. Retrieved from https://www.wired.com/2003/11/artist/

Sound & Vision: Kanye West's "Graduation" by Takashi Murakami. (2019, August 25). Retrieved from https://www.juxtapoz.com/news/music/sound-vision-kanye-west-s-graduation-by-takashi-murakami/

Storey, J. (2009). What is popular culture Cultural Theory and Popular Culture, pp. 1-16.

Comments

  1. Hi Juliana! I like your ideas very much. You did such a great job in elaborating the conflict between the commercialization and the authenticity of an art. Your blog confirms the opinion that by transforming his art into a “mass culture,” Murakami makes his work more approachable and profitable. But interestingly, this blog objects to agree on that this commercial culture is “hopeless.” You acknowledge Benjamin’s opinion that mechanical reproduction is physically altering the content of the art, but you don’t think this process necessarily reduces the authenticity and the aura of postmodern art. You argue that since Murakami’s digital art is born to be on the Internet, it is free from traditional boundaries of space and time. Technology brings this unprecedented art form which may revolutionize our perception of art. I find this opinion very critical and debatable. These original thoughts are rather appreciable.

    Besides, you chooses a comparatively ambivalent way to define pop culture as postmodern culture, which can be very challenging. Your blog explains the high culture that Murakami used to pursue by briefly describing his past experience as a traditionalist, which is a perfect place to start with. I just hope that I can see more details about his transition to pursue “market survivability.” This blog carefully elaborates how in general Murakami’s art accords with the definition of postmodern culture. But I think more analysis of how specific details in his art works, such as the album cover that he cooperates with Kanye, represents the closing gap between high culture and pop culture will make the demonstration more vivid. Anyway, I really like the original ideas in this blog, and more details can make it even more perfect.

    From Chenxi Shi

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Olufikemi Ogunyankin Prompt #5

Kendrick Lamar’s Camp Eye for the ‘Other’ Kendrick Lamar is an award winning African-American rapper and songwriter, who distinguishes himself from his peers by transforming his raw life experiences into pieces of art. His music videos for Alright and ELEMENT. convey the patterns of Afro-surrealism, transformation of trauma and Black perservance. Coined by Amiri Baraka, Afro-surrealism is the “skill at creating an entirely different world organically connected to this one ... the Black aesthetic in its actual contemporary and lived life” (p.p. 164-165). It is how Black creatives present the larger-than-life experience of racism in a way that is shocking and doesn’t seem real. This concept, integrally shared by the two videos, will be discussed in the context of the ideas of Stuart Hall and Susan Sontag. In chapter 4 of Representation: Cultural representations and signifying practices, Hall discusses “regime[s] of representation,” which are the “visual effects through which ‘difference’...

River Robinson Prompt #1

In 2015, Lin Manuel Miranda, premiered the first showing of America’s Pulitzer prize winning and 2016’s best musical, Hamilton (Hamilton, 2022). The play utilizes high tempo music and intense scenes to narrate the adult life of Alexander Hamilton, the West Indian born statesman and father of the constitution. Upon first glance the play may seem humdrum, but Miranda’s modern twist provides the audience an exhilarating performance that keeps the viewer on the edge of their seat. In general, Broadway plays have always been high culture artifacts due to their niche audience of upper class individuals. For most of society, musicals were most commonly ingested through mundane but cute middle school adaptations, rather than these quintessential performances. However, Miranda’s Hamilton redefined nearly every aspect of what Broadway shows should consist of and what their target audiences could be.  When you hear “musical”, rap is not the first thing that comes to mind. While the music may ...

Patrick Miller - It’s Time to Heart-Stop Romanticizing Real-World Struggles

 In recent years, queer-centered narratives and storylines have flourished greatly within mainstream media. One such instance of LGBTQ+ stories being placed in the spotlight is the Netflix program Heartstopper, based on the book series by Alice Oseman. Heartstopper highlights young LGBTQ+ relationships in a lighthearted, approachable manner, acting as both a form of education and entertainment for audiences of all ages – a kind of media that I would have truly appreciated growing up as a gay child. Despite the “sunshine and rainbows” lens that Heartstopper places on queer relationships, the series tackles situations that aren’t as light as well. This is where problems begin to arise… The show’s most recent season, which aired this October, follows 16-year-old protagonist Charlie Spring’s battle with a newly developed eating disorder. While this plotline had the potential to leave a meaningful impact on the show’s audience, I feel that the program’s approach to this sensitive topic ...