consumerism and art
Murakami’s 2017 exhibition at MCA titled “The Octopus eats its Own Leg” was a sold-out showing of his most influential works (Blay, 2018). The saying “Octopus Eats its Own Leg” refers to a situation where an octopus self-cannibalises to survive dire times, knowing the leg will grow back (Murakami et all, 2017). In the context of Murakami’s work,
... See moreYou remember that idea from romanticism, that which is simply too great to be contemplated as a whole and makes us feel humanly insignificant in the face of it, and so forth. But what happens in a lot of the spectacular work of the 90s and 2000s is it was designed to be easily understood in the shortest amount of time, to be visually consumed in an
... See moreThe the autocratic reign of the market economy assumes that it's incredibly difficult to escape, that the market economy has control over every aspect of our lives, including the creative or relational spaces. De Boer argues that what this does is reduce reality. our lived experience of the world, to an endless supply of commodifiable fragments,
... See more‘when culture becomes nothing more than a commodity, it must also become the star commodity of the spectacular society’ – Debord, Thesis 193, the society of the spectacle 1967
The Complete Backstory of the Louis Vuitton x Murakami Collection
Louis Vuitton Ends Its 13-Year Relationship With Takashi Murakami
The Missing Piece in Conversations about “Cultural Decline”
Dean Kissick • The Painted Protest, by Dean Kissick
"The Japanese people get fed TV and media for 24... See more