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Zombies in the Graveyard
Zombies in the Graveyard
Zombies in the Graveyard

Zombies in the Graveyard

Artist (Tokyo, Japan, born 1974)
Date2001
Mediumphotographic print on photographic paper
ClassificationsPhotographs
Dimensions100 x 138cm
AcquisitionPurchased in 2004 with support from the National Collecting Scheme for Scotland and the National Fund for Acquisitions.
Copyright© 2001 Chiho Aoshima/Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
LocationOn Display - Gallery 01
Object numberABDAG014302
About MeInternationally acclaimed Japanese artist Chiho Aoshima combines computer-based digital illustration and the stylistic conventions of 18th-Century Japanese prints to create distinctive images that are both controversial and beguiling. A central influence on her is the vibrant, disturbing world of Japanese manga cartoons, where enthusiasts are lured into a magical world that is divorced from reality.

In this work Aoshima's cute girls populate a mythical, eerie graveyard. Their elongated, ghost-like figures drift aimlessly, emitting speech bubbles with inane statements. The bizarre contrast of levity and gratuitous violence has clear parallels with contemporary movies such as Quentin Tarantino's infamous 'Kill Bill 1' which was also inspired by the strange and surreal world of manga.

For more information on how this work was acquired see https://casconsultancy.org/objects/zombies-graveyard-2001.
More About Me
A common element of manga art is that of "kawaiisa" or cuteness. Can you see elements of kawaiisa in this picture? Do you think it is effective?
Exhibitions
Graveyard, Catterline
Angus Menmuir Neil
Lover's Walk
George Chapman
1962
Fittleworth
Gwenda Morgan
1953
St Machar Cathedral
St Machar's Cathedral
1930s
St Machar Cathedral
St Machar's Cathedral
1930s
A Street in Ronda
Sir Muirhead Bone
1925
Street Scene
James McBey
1913
Shiprow by William Bowie
William Bowie
1925
Nelson Place, Walcot, Bath
Walter Richard Sickert
c. 1916 - 1918
A Street in Seville
Garden Grant Smith
1900-1924
Nelson's Tower, Forres
William Daniell