
"The Louis Vuitton project is my Urinal!"
Takashi Murakami is the West's favourite Japanese artist, a spiritual heir of Warhol who has expanded into merchandising as an art form, quoting Duchamp as his model?
Takashi Murakami has been called Tokyo's son of Warhol, but the scope of this most protean and dynamic of artists would be the envy of Andy.
Murakami's Kaikai Kiki corporation, which has branches in Tokyo and Long Island City, New York, combines the roles of studio, PR company, art factory and seed bed for young artists.
Its prodigious output ranges from highly priced and highly sought-after paintings and sculpture-collected by the likes of Francois Pinault-and luxury collaborations with Marc Jacobs and Louis Vuitton, to more affordable low-cost products covered with Murakami's cheerily bitter-sweet cartoonish imagery combining manga with a substantial dose of Disney.
Now the many modes of Murakami are being shown in a big retrospective opening this month at MOCA Los Angeles (29 October-11 February 2008), an exhibition that has aroused controversy even before its opening by including a fully functional Louis Vuitton boutique among its exhibits.
(lengthy interview follows the jump)