logo
Takashi Murakami Heals With History in ‘Stepping on the Tail of a Rainbow'

Takashi Murakami Heals With History in ‘Stepping on the Tail of a Rainbow'

Hypebeast19-05-2025

On a rainy mid-May morning,Takashi Murakamiarrived at theCleveland Museum of Artto inaugurateStepping on the Tail of a Rainbow, one of his biggest American exhibitions in 20 years. With more than 100 paintings and sculptures, the exhibition offers not only a more complete understanding of the famed Japanese artist today but also brings his converging timelines and aesthetics full circle.
The exhibition was originally presented atLos Angeles's The Broadin 2022, and since then it's been expanded with new works — most notably, a replica of the ancient Yumedono temple in the museum's atrium.
While the sounds of hammers and drills reverberated through the still-unopened exhibit, Murakami was calm and focused, seated in a quiet dining room in the back of the museum. As what some might call 'elevator music' played ever so softly, Murakami paused to ask if the music could be shut off so he could detail the exhibition's inspiration in silence.
'By stepping on the tail of the rainbow, I was hoping that would then unexpectedly lead you to encounter a new world.'
In addition to referencing his 82-foot-long painting from 2014, 'In the Land of the Dead, Stepping on the Tail of a Rainbow,' Murakami cited the cinematic influence of Akira Kurosawa'sThe Men Who Tread on the Tiger's Tail (1952). 'Stepping on the tiger's tail would mean that you're stepping on something you shouldn't,' Murakami explained. 'Your action, which was perhaps insignificant, has caused a major consequence. In this case, by stepping on the tail of the rainbow, I was hoping that would then unexpectedly lead you to encounter a new world.'
According to Murakami, 'In the Land of the Dead, Stepping on the Tail of a Rainbow' was also inspired by an earlier work by 16th-century Japanese painter Soga Shōhaku, who further drew from the ancient Taoist concept of 'immortals.' The artist created the massive canvas in the wake of Japan's 2011 earthquake and tsunami, as he found himself pondering Japan's spirituality and its multinational influences.
'Japan has always been importing religion and culture from places like India, China, and even from Western countries, and mixing them up into our own culture. But against the backdrop of that, the country is prone to natural disasters, and a lot of people die at once, frequently.' He understands this as core to Japan's pantheistic tradition with its myriad gods, as well as its animistic values, which view nature as a spiritual force, 'including rainbows.'
There is indeed something sacred and transcendental about the exhibit, which places the Yumedono temple replica at the start, guiding visitors inside, where four new large-scale paintings cover the walls: 'Blue Dragon Kyoto,' 'Vermillion Bird Kyoto,' 'White Tiger Kyoto,' and 'Black Tortoise Kyoto.'
The original building in Nara, Japan, is believed to be on the same site as Prince Shōtoku Taishi's home, a royal credited with promoting Buddhism in Japan during the late 500s CE. Today, Nara's Yumedono houses a seventh-century statue of the Prince, believed to carry healing powers.
However, Murakami, known for his stylistic reinterpretation, symbolism, and playful irony, isn't heavily concerned with historical accuracy. Instead, he embraces how metaphors and abstractions, like his kawaii characters, can convey emotion and meaning in impactful ways.
To illustrate this, he continuously circles back to the cinematic language ofShōgun, produced by American creators Justin Marks and Rachel Kondo. 'I realized that the period drama doesn't have to follow historical facts accurately. It can express them differently and still effectively convey the concepts.'
Recounting a highly dramatized temple scene, he said, 'The ceiling was way too high, and the space was humongous — so you could tell that it wasn't historically accurate, but it showed the power of the then Shōgun, Toyotomi Hideyoshi. The visual grammar worked, and I was moved by it.'
As you move out of the Yumedono replica and enter the lower galleries, you're quickly reminded that Murakami's work occupies a unique space between East and West, past and future, tragedy and euphoria, and cute and creepy. In one room, a gigantic, shiny sculpture of his ubiquitous flower motif is installed close to the ceiling, angled downward and smiling at the spectator like a distant idol in the sky. In another corridor, anime-inspired characters Kaikai and Kiki are blown up to monumental proportions, like a pair of sphinxes protecting an ancient site. In the same room, where his lighthearted NFT artwork and enlarged Manga sculptures are displayed, other pieces make heavier impacts, like '100 Arhats' (2013), which Murakami painted in response to the 2011 earthquake and tsunami with references to pre-modern Japanese art forms.
At this juncture of Murakami's career, he says, 'I feel that I have more freedom to express whatever I choose,' but his biggest struggle is his boredom. 'A lot of people ask me to create flower paintings, and I have to make them, but I get bored easily. So, the question is, how do I escape from this kind of boredom and routine?'
Murakami views his career like a television series: his story arc mimics that of a bingeable show's protagonist, with major main-character moments, important side plots, and myriad supporting personalities. After establishing his place in the contemporary art scene with his signature 'Superflat' style in the early aughts, he's since brought renewed focus to his background in traditional Japanese art forms. However, he's simultaneously challenged himself to employ novel technologies like NFTs and the virtual realm of the 'metaverse.'
'When you first encounter minimal contemporary art, you often don't know what you're looking at. It's very mysterious. And then, when you think you understand something, you see a completely different landscape.'
The artist has even spoken openly about using Generative AI, not merely as a one-stop shop for art making but as an aid in developing concepts in their early stages. When experimenting with technology, Murakami references 20th-century French conceptual artist Marcel Duchamp, a controversial figure for his subversive art using found objects, including urinals.
'When you first encounter minimal contemporary art, you often don't know what you're looking at. It's very mysterious. And then, when you think you understand something, you see a completely different landscape. When Duchamp started his concept, of course, people didn't understand right away. It took many, many years,' he said. 'But when some kind of technology explodes in a given moment, there's significance to it, so I usually respect it. And if I'm interested, I always intend to get actively engaged.'
Murakami's work has always revelled in the tensions of modernity, especially the ways technology has dramatically reshaped culture. However, as he's embraced modalities of the future, his artwork has instead reached further into the depths of history, tying his colorful spectrum of historical references together.
A few minutes after our conversation, the clouds finally let up, and the sun flooded the room with warm light. With a steaming cup of green tea in front of him, Murakami widened his eyes with delight and sent a soft smile across the room.
Stepping on the Tail of Rainbowwill be on view at the Cleveland Museum of Art from May 25 to September 7, 2025.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

That's no ruby. It's an extremely rare red diamond.
That's no ruby. It's an extremely rare red diamond.

Yahoo

time43 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

That's no ruby. It's an extremely rare red diamond.

While it may look like a blazing red ruby, the 2.33-carat Winston Red Diamond is just that—a diamond. One of the rarest diamonds in the world, the Winston Red Diamond is on display at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History in Washington DC–right near the more famous Hope Diamond. To learn more about this exceedingly rare Fancy Red diamond, Smithsonian gem and mineral curator Gabriela Farfan and colleagues spent two years researching its history and tracing its geological past. The team officially categorized the diamond and also narrowed down its potential country of origin as Venezuela or Brazil. The findings are detailed in a study published June 6 in the journal Gems & Gemology. Ronald Winston, son of famed American jeweler Harry Winston, donated the roughly 8 millimeter in diameter diamond to the Smithsonian in 2023. It is the fifth-largest confirmed red diamond in the world. Based on its old mine brilliant cut, gemologists believe that it was likely mined before the middle of the 20th century. This older style of cutting diamonds predates the more modern brilliant cuts seen today. Gemologists estimate that one in every 25 million diamonds is fancy red. According to the Smithsonian, this specific red diamond's documented history begins in 1938, when it belonged to the Cartier Family. The Cartiers then sold it to the Maharaja of Jamnagar India sometime before the 1980s. Winston purchased the stone from the Maharaja in the late 1980s and the diamond once adorned a ring worn by actress Brooke Shields in 1989. At 2.23 carats, it is smaller than the largest confirmed fancy red diamond. The Moussaieff Red clocks in at 5.11 carats and has been displayed in museums around the world. On April 1,the Winston Red Diamond officially went on display at the National Museum of Natural History in Washington DC. Scientifically describing and detailing the Winston Red's color and history was one of the major goals of this new study. Red diamonds are exceedingly rare, which makes studying them equally difficult. A diamond's color is largely determined by its chemical make-up. For example, a traditional white diamond is mostly composed of carbon. Small amounts of nitrogen will give a diamond a more yellow hue. If those nitrogen atoms have enough time–several millions of years–to aggregate in groups, the diamond will appear more brown. After even more years, if the nitrogen atoms form in groups of three surrounding a missing carbon atom, it will turn a yellow color. If the element boron replaces carbon, it produces a blue hue. Red and pink diamonds don't owe their color to chemistry. The extreme pressures and temperatures deep within the Earth can lead to plastic deformation within the rock. During plastic deformation, the atomic bonds in the diamond break and re-form along imperfections called dislocations. These deformations will change the diamond's atomic structure and affect how the light interacts with the stone. It's this deflection that gives it its rosy hue. Pink diamonds get their color in a similar way, since the color red is a more saturated pink. The Winston Red is also considered a Fancy Red diamond, meaning its color is pure red. It does not have any other modifying hues like purple, brown, or orange. Only 0.04 percent of fancy colored diamonds have this Fancy red color grade. The chances of finding a Fancy red diamond like the Winston Red is about one in 25 million diamonds. [ Related: The mystery behind pink diamonds just got some more clarity. ] To learn more, the team used several techniques including photoluminescence, spectroscopy, and cathodoluminescence to study the precious stone. These analyses confirmed the presence of plastic deformation bands and a pattern that officially classifies it as a type IaAB (A<B) Group 1 'pink' diamond. The diamond underwent significant pressure and temperature conditions when it was forming. They also found that the Winston Red gets its pure crimson color because it had a careful balance of the right pressure and temperature during its formation. Based on its mineralogical characteristics and mid-20th century cut, the team believes that it likely originated in Venezuela or Brazil. However, its precise place of origin is still unknown.

Dean Cain says men shouldn't compete in women's sports; releases heartwarming film on girls' soccer team
Dean Cain says men shouldn't compete in women's sports; releases heartwarming film on girls' soccer team

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Dean Cain says men shouldn't compete in women's sports; releases heartwarming film on girls' soccer team

Friday marks the nationwide release of family-friendly sports film "Little Angels", a triumphant story of a team of athletes and an unyielding coach, written, directed and produced by actor Dean Cain. "Little Angels" unfolds the story of Jake Rogers, a Division I college football coach, played by Cain, with $5 million and a take-it-or-leave-it chance for redemption on the line. A male-centric statement hurdles the lead into a reflective arc and, when writing the script, the red-card comment "soccer is for girls," was definitive, according to Cain. "It's always a joke I make," Cain told Fox News Digital. Dean Cain Says He Turned Down Being One Of The Highest-paid Actors On Tv To Raise His Son Alone "Soccer is the world's game and I make fun of soccer because I played as an American football player and that's just what we do. We make fun of soccer. We make fun of rugby." In 1988, after his collegiate football career at Princeton, Cain was signed to the Buffalo Bills as a rookie. His professional NFL career came to a halt when he injured his knee. Read On The Fox News App While the on-air declaration that soccer is for girls kicks off Rogers' journey to softening in "Little Angels", the topic of men in women's sports is not a cornerstone of the film. However, Cain is firm in his position that, after a certain age, boys and girls should not compete together. "I'm a huge, huge supporter of women's athletics," Cain told Fox News Digital. "I don't think men or boys have any business once they're past the age of 7 or 10 competing together." "When you get to those higher levels, I don't think that men should be competing with women, period, end of story," Cain said. "Many of my ex-girlfriends have been professional athletes, and I really have tremendous respect for women's sports. I think it's hugely important to have women be able to compete against women and do that." Dean Cain's New Christmas Movie Celebrates Faith: A 'Trip Back In Time To Bethlehem' The benchmark theme of "Little Angels" is purpose and perspective and reserves the plot for a heartwarming tale of teamwork and family. "There's a lot of me in that character," Cain said of Rogers. Despite public perception, Rogers cannot be defended from his offside remark about female athletes. "College football coaches get looked at sometimes like they're a deity of something, like they're a God of some kind," Cain said. Rogers is met with an ultimatum: coach a team of 12-year-old girls or lose $5 million. Films like "A League of Their Own," "The Mighty Ducks" and even the true underdog story of "Dodgeball" echo a similar sentiment and evoke childhood memories across generations. Dean Cain Says He 'Had To Get Out Of California': 'Land Of Ridiculousness' The timeless tale in each of these movies follows a team of misfits bonded together by both their love of the game and a defeated coach who finds inspiration through group aspirations. This narrative conjures wistful affection in a way that other genres outside sports dramas cannot. "Take a guy who is flawed in a situation where he doesn't want to be," Cain said. "Through human experience and being with these young ladies and other people, he teaches them teamwork and the value of team and family." The movie, starring Lou Ferrigno, Bryan Callen and Swedish actress Helena Mattson, began casting during the COVID-19 pandemic. "You hope that you get them together and they have chemistry," he said of the athletes. "They are the heart of the story." "The young actresses were phenomenal," Cain said of a cast including Alex Jayne Go and "Role Models" actress Alexandra Stamler. Cain's niece and goddaughter also star in the film as athletes. "I've been called Superman forever and that's great. I love it," Cain said. "If people call me Coach Jake after this, 'Hey Coach Jake,' that's a warm fuzzy for me. It's a big-time warm and fuzzy." Cain is working on four films this year, including a golf-centered movie that he is co-directing with his son. The world premiere of "Little Angels" was featured at the International Christian Film Festival (ICFF) in May. There, Cain was awarded with the ICFF Lifetime Achievement Award. "I've been producing for a long time and directing," Cain said. "Man, I don't feel like I'm anywhere near getting a Lifetime Achievement Award, so, I think they were just being nice to me." "Little Angels" hits theaters nationwide on Friday, June 6, article source: Dean Cain says men shouldn't compete in women's sports; releases heartwarming film on girls' soccer team

Nightlife crisis sees British ticket app snapped up by US rival
Nightlife crisis sees British ticket app snapped up by US rival

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Nightlife crisis sees British ticket app snapped up by US rival

A major live music ticketing app has been bought by a US rival after narrowly avoiding administration, laying bare the difficulties faced by the UK's late-night sector. Dice FM, which sells tickets to concerts, nightclubs and other cultural events, has been acquired by rival platform Fever, just days after filing an official notice that it intended to appoint administrators. Companies do this when they are at risk of going bust and need protection from their creditors while they restructure their finances. A source close to the situation said Dice FM had taken the step as a precaution. The deal will mean that Dice, which runs one of the UK's biggest ticketing apps, becomes part of New York-headquartered Fever. Dice FM sells tickets as QR codes, which can be exchanged or returned through the app. Users can sync their Spotify and Apple Music accounts to the app to receive recommendations and alerts for when acts are touring. The app grew in popularity as traditional ticketing platforms faced increased scrutiny over their practices. The British company, which was founded in 2014, has raised nearly $200m (£147m) from investors in recent years. Dice FM says it charges fewer fees and does not allow for tickets to be sold on any secondary market, effectively eliminating scalping, where tickets are bought in bulk and sold on for profit. Its backers have included the investment firm Softbank, the French billionaire telecoms mogul Xavier Niel and Tony Fadell, the American engineer and businessman who became known as the 'father of the iPod' when he was a senior executive at Apple. Mr Fadell joined the board of Dice FM in 2021. Details of the deal or how much was paid for Dice FM have not been revealed. However, the signs that Dice risked administration will add fuel to growing worries over the future of Britain's late-night and cultural industries. Thousands of nightclubs and independent music venues have closed since the pandemic. This has been blamed on a combination of soaring costs, burdensome red tape and licensing laws, cost of living pressures and a growing trend for people going home early and drinking less. Ministers have said they want to slash red tape for hospitality firms and help restore Britain's diminishing nightlife. Sir Sadiq Khan has been handed fresh powers to 'call in' blocked planning applications in London, while industry chiefs are being quizzed on ways to boost the sector. Dice FM's accounts have been overdue for almost a year. It was due to file documents for the year to Dec 31 2023 by June 23 last year, according to Companies House, but never did. In 2023, the company enacted a round of lay-offs, saying at the time it had 'made the difficult decision to restructure parts of our business to ensure we can focus on our most important initiatives'. Last year, it was first reported that Dice FM was exploring a potential sale. Softbank was said to be eager to sell its stake at the time. Fever was founded in New York in 2014 and offers ticketing services in 200 cities across the world. It is the partner of many major music festivals, including Primavera Sound. Phil Hutcheon, founder and chief executive of Dice, said the deal would allow the company 'to scale even faster' and expand into new cities. The company said there would be no change to how people use the app. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store