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Marie Kondo, Takashi Murakami and the Other Japanese Icons on T’s New Covers

Marie Kondo, Takashi Murakami and the Other Japanese Icons on T’s New Covers

The five covers of T’s annual Culture issue — which this year is devoted entirely to Japan and its outsize cultural influence on the world — feature six of the country’s icons, one of whom is nonhuman. The 88-year-old artist and graphic designer Tadanori Yokoo made a collage featuring classic Japanese monsters — with Godzilla as the star — for his cover. The other subjects were shot by the photographer Piczo in various Tokyo locations at night, accompanied by models wearing spring looks from Japanese fashion designers and replicas of ancient Japanese masks, many of them from the tradition of Noh theater, which dates to the 14th century. The diverse group, which includes an international television star, a shape-shifting photographer, a pair of architects reconceiving contemporary museum design and a wildly successful artist, has redefined the way that Japan looks, thinks and creates.

Takashi Murakami

With work that includes painting and sculpture but also music videos, album covers, toys, key chains, trading cards and a recently rereleased collection of Louis Vuitton bags, Takashi Murakami, 63, is arguably Japan’s best-known living artist. The founder of the Superflat movement — which compresses the iconography of Japanese culture into cartoonish, brightly colored 2-D imagery — Murakami, who is based in Tokyo, studied traditional Japanese painting in art school, an education reflected in two new exhibits. A solo show at Gagosian in New York opening in May will include the paintings he created in response to the 19th-century artist Utagawa Hiroshige’s “100 Famous Views of Edo,” while “Takashi Murakami: Stepping on the Tail of a Rainbow,” on view from May 25 to Sept. 7 at the Cleveland Museum of Art, will fill the museum’s atrium with his re-creation of the Yumedono (or Hall of Dreams), an octagonal structure built in the eighth century as part of the Horyuji temple complex in Nara.

Hair and makeup by Rie Shiraishi. Model: Mayo at Stanford

From left: Noir Kei Ninomiya dress, hat, shoes and socks, price on request, shop.doverstreetmarket.com/us; and stylist’s own mask. Marie Kondo wears a Celine by Hedi Slimane dress, $3,250, and shoes, $1,250, celine.com.Credit...Photograph by Piczo. Styled by Shotaro Yamaguchi
Marie Kondo

Marie Kondo, 40, realized at age 5 that she preferred organizing her dolls to playing with them. As a 19-year-old university student in Tokyo, she established what she calls her “tidying” business and, seven years later, in 2010, published her first book, “The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up,” which has been translated into 44 languages and adapted into a hit Netflix series. It was Kondo’s show that introduced mainstream America to the idea that possessions worth holding on to should, as she has famously said, “spark joy,” a concept she discovered after blacking out during a particularly grueling clutter-clearing session and waking up to find that, if she looked at them closely, treasured objects appeared to glow. Her company is now based in Los Angeles.

Hair by Yusuke Morioka at Eight Peace. Makeup by Asami Taguchi at Home Agency Tokyo. Prop stylist: Agnes Natawijaya. Model: Mayo at Stanford

The New York Times

The New York Times

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