%20Dua%20Lipa%20-%20Radical%20Optimism%20JP%20%231.png)
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Dua Lipa - Radical Optimism (Japan Tour Edition) | Warner Records UK / Hajime Sorayama |
Sorayama has become more and more of a known figure in American pop culture over the past couple of decades. He illustrated the cover for Aerosmith 2001 album Just Press Play, featuring his signature robot lady. He collaborated with KAWS in 2008. He collaborated with Dior in 2019, where his robot lady pretty much stole the entire show. And Dior even released a collection of T-shirts with his designs. Sorayama also directed the music video for The Weekend’s “Echoes of Silence” and created a statue for his 2021 After Hours Til Dawn Tour. And more recently he found himself on the radars of the Beyhive, following comments that he’d made about - surprise, surprise - Beyonce copying his work and expressing his wishes that he had reached out to him so he could have created something for her. The Instagram post is still up, even after being swarmed by stans. He even @’d Beyonce in the post. It’s funny. Because the thing he is referring to is one of Beyonce’s looks, which shows up several times in the tour visuals. But the Renaissance World tour also features visuals of a robot Beyonce, which bears greater resemblance to his work. If I were Sorayama, I woulda been more pissed over the latter, given that it genuinely does look like this work, to the point that when I first saw it, I wondered if he had something to do with it. And honestly, I think folk would have been more sympathetic to him if those visuals were the examples he used, because the likeness is so obvious. Beyonce in a robot style headpiece which could so easily be a reference to Metropolis, doesn’t scream Sorayma as much as a stylised chrome version of Beyonce on a rocket ship with titty sparks and handcuffs.
It’s really interesting to see another Japanese artist gain prominence and such widespread attention in American pop culture. In the early 2000s Takashi Murakami was experiencing exactly what Sorayama is experiencing now. He did a collaboration with a luxury fashion brand, Louis Vuitton. He worked closely with a popular music artist, illustrating the album artwork for Kanye West’s 2007 album Graduation. And then later in 2019, he would direct a music video for Billie Eilish.
When Lipa hits Japan, she should perform my mashup of “Physical”, to get some of the locals and the Perfume fans talking.
💿 Album Reviews: Future Nostalgia | Radical Optimism
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