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Catinca Tabacaru Gallery, New York NY USA - SHINJI MURAKAMI - January 22 > February 21, 2016

solo exhibition
SHINJI MURAKAMI

250 Broome Street New York, NY 10002 United States

+1 212-260-2481 e-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

January 22 > February 21, 2016


SHINJI MURAKAMI
Shinji Murakami, Horse, 2015, plywood, screw, alkyd with stand, 46 x 48 x 12 in

"Making the simple complicated is commonplace; making the complicated simple, awesomely simple, that's creativity." Charles Mingus
CATINCA TABACARU GALLERY presents , an exhibition of new works by Japanese artist Shinji Murakami. Featuring 14 works in flat, sculptural and LED form, the gallery is filled with flowers, hearts, rainbows, sparkles and a galloping horse to boot. While “cute,” might be the first impression, what follows is the hand of a master craftsman working in wood with the precision and detail orientation famed in Japanese tradition.
In line with his 3-decade long affair with 8-bit technology, Murakami has selected emoji as the avatars of his new series of works. This increasingly rich digital vocabulary recently exploded into mainstream culture as a deeper and more personable way to express thoughts and feelings; a new borderless language, transcending nationhood and generational gaps was born. By the time the Oxford Dictionary made its annual word in 2015, the news was hardly a surprise.
Murakami’s art world journey began on the streets of Tokyo more than 15 years ago. Instead of tagging his name and limiting his audience to hip graffiti kids, Murakami drew characters that would engage a broader range of children and adults – puppies, flowers, bunnies and hearts. These new age hieroglyphics became the beginnings of Murakami’s own borderless language, exploring simplification as its core concept and aiming to offer happiness on a global level.
Emoji are made of pixels and pixels are building blocks that can be arranged in a finite number of ways then colored from a limited palette. Murakami’s sculptures, some reaching 5-feet in height, present no extraneous details as “pixels” are rendered of hand-cut wooden blocks, painted in acrylic and enamel, and stacked to create bold minimal forms. In the same vein, three paintings and an LED drawing use no more than a few colored squares to express the complex environment that incarnates a virtual world into our physical realm.
Catinca Tabacaru Gallery, New York NY USA - SHINJI MURAKAMI - January 22 > February 21, 2016
Opening reception: Friday January 22, 6-8pm
mpefm USA art press release
Gallery Hours: Wednesday - Sunday 11:00am – 6:00pm

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