Little Boy: The Arts of Japan's Exploding Subculture

Little Boy: The Arts of Japan's Exploding Subculture  
Author(s) Takashi Murakami
Subject(s) Modern art, Japanese popular culture
Publisher Yale University Press
Publication date 2005
Pages 298
ISBN 978-0913304570
OCLC Number 58998868

Little Boy: The Arts of Japan's Exploding Subculture is a non-fiction photographic narrative from Japanese artist Takashi Murakami. The book is about the aesthetics of postwar culture in Japan.

Blueprint

The 448 pages hardcover book was published by Yale University in conjunction with a series of art exhibitions and music events in the Japan Society of New York in 2005. The book interprets the complex intuitive twist of postwar Japanese art while defining its high-spirited and naturally buoyant escape from human tragedy and the events of World War 2. Takashi Murakami also coins the term superflat to chronicle the two-dimensional aspect of manga (comics) and anime (animated television and cinema). He argues how this international boom in pop media culture influenced Japanese fine art in relation to the social implications of superflat regarding the true impact of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945 on Japanese art and culture. Little Boy is the code name for one of the atomic bombs that devastated Japan.

Little Boy also examines Kawaii (可愛さ kawaisa), the culture of cuteness which influenced Mexico during the postmodernist era of late 1900s; and the dissected pop-culture movement of Otaku. The book contains a collection of works including the first Godzilla, the anime Neon Genesis Evangelion, and the paintings of Chiho Aoshima.

Japan Society exhibit

Little Boy is the companion volume for an art exhibition of the same name at the Japan Society in conjunction with the Public Art Fund in April 2005. This exhibition, curated by Murakami, explored the culture of postwar Japan through the art and visual media from Hideaki Anno, Chiho Aoshima, Chinatsu Ban, Fujiko Fujio, Kawashima Hideaki, Kato Izumi, Komatsuzaki Shigeru, Mahomi Kunikata, Leiji Matsumoto, Miura Jun, "Mr.", Narita Toru, Tarō Okamoto, Oshima Yuki, Katsuhiro Ōtomo, Otomo Shoji, Aya Takano, Tsubaki Noboru, Kenji Yanobe, Yoshitomo Nara and Takashi Murakami.

External links