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Izumi Kato - Soft Vinyl Figurine - Boy (Red Exclusive)
Izumi Kato - Soft Vinyl Figurine - Boy (Red Exclusive)
Izumi Kato - Soft Vinyl Figurine - Boy (Red Exclusive)
Izumi Kato - Soft Vinyl Figurine - Boy (Red Exclusive)
Izumi Kato - Soft Vinyl Figurine - Boy (Red Exclusive)
Izumi Kato - Soft Vinyl Figurine - Boy (Red Exclusive)
Izumi Kato - Soft Vinyl Figurine - Boy (Red Exclusive)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Izumi Kato - Soft Vinyl Figurine - Boy (Red Exclusive)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Izumi Kato - Soft Vinyl Figurine - Boy (Red Exclusive)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Izumi Kato - Soft Vinyl Figurine - Boy (Red Exclusive)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Izumi Kato - Soft Vinyl Figurine - Boy (Red Exclusive)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Izumi Kato - Soft Vinyl Figurine - Boy (Red Exclusive)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Izumi Kato - Soft Vinyl Figurine - Boy (Red Exclusive)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Izumi Kato - Soft Vinyl Figurine - Boy (Red Exclusive)

Izumi Kato - Soft Vinyl Figurine - Boy (Red Exclusive)

Regular price
$70.00
Sale price
$70.00
Regular price
Sold out
Unit price
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Figure in cast soft vinyl and articulated head
Size: 16.5 cm | 7 inch
Open edition, coloring available exclusively at Perrotin

The figure is meant to lean against a vertical surface in order to stand. Delivered in a custom designed product box. 

Limit of 2 per person/household please. 

About the artist: 

Kato graduated from the Department of Oil Painting at Musashino University in 1992. Since the 2000s, he has garnered attention as an innovative artist through exhibitions held in Japan and across the world. In 2007, he was invited to take part in the 52nd Venice Biennale International Exhibition, curated by Robert Storr.

Children with disturbing faces, embryos with fully developed limbs, ancestor spirits locked up in bodies with imprecise forms—the creatures summoned by Izumi Kato are as fascinating as they are enigmatic. Their anonymous silhouettes and strange faces, largely absent of features, emphasize simple forms and strong colors; their elementary representation, an oval head with two big, fathomless eyes, depicts no more than a crudely figured nose and mouth. Bringing to mind primitive arts, their expressions evoke totems and the animist belief that a spiritual force runs through living and mineral worlds alike. Embodying a primal, universal form of humanity founded less on reason than on intuition, these magical beings invite viewers to recognize themselves.