A powerful and important antiwar mural painted in Mexico by famed Japanese modern artist, Taro Okamoto (1911-1996). This gigantic mural captures the precise instant of an atomic bomb explosion, with the impact point of the work focussing on a human at Ground Zero flashing into skeletalized vaporisation. Painted for a failed luxury hotel lobby commission in 1968-'69, then discarded and lost for many years, the cast-off and forgotten panels were rediscovered in 2003 after being abandoned in a construction yard near Mexico City, restored by the Taro Okamoto Memorial Museum, and now rests in hopeful peace in Tokyo, Japan. In "Taro's Magnum Opus" - measuring some 18 feet high by 98 feet long - Okamoto’s incendiary artwork is an Awesome and universally understood indictment of the ultimate Dark power of nuclear warfare. Never Again. ( Level 7: A guerrilla street art commentary by the ChinPomu collective about the Fukushima disaster, designed to fit in seamlessly with the Myth of Tomorrow, was added to the base of Okamoto's work while exhibited at the Shibuya train station in Tokyo. Chin Pom's apt paste-up was left in view for only a few hours before being removed by the Authorities.) Read more at www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/the-atomic-artists/chimpom-art/#ixzz1kXg1SdBp; http://www.taromuseum.jp
http://www.tokyoreporter.com/2008/11/06/shibuya-set-for-one-final-explosion/
This board is at home doing grinds on the half-pipe or kickflips in the street. Using the best quality hard-rock maple, we gave it a competition shape and supreme pop! We finish the board with our patent-pending printing process, making it the best skateboard in the world.
Order yourself the complete board. We add Krux or Independent trucks (based on deck style), Bullet bearings, Ricta wheels, grip tape and mounting hardware.
Asu no Shinwa - Myth of Tomorrow - Mural Deck Skate Board Deck
Order the complete board! It’s fully assembled. We’ve added premium-quality trucks, bearings, wheels, mounting hardware and tape. All you do is open the box and ride!
A powerful and important antiwar mural painted in Mexico by famed Japanese modern artist, Taro Okamoto (1911-1996). This gigantic mural captures the precise instant of an atomic bomb explosion, with the impact point of the work focussing on a human at Ground Zero flashing into skeletalized vaporisation. Painted for a failed luxury hotel lobby commission in 1968-'69, then discarded and lost for many years, the cast-off and forgotten panels were rediscovered in 2003 after being abandoned in a construction yard near Mexico City, restored by the Taro Okamoto Memorial Museum, and now rests in hopeful peace in Tokyo, Japan. In "Taro's Magnum Opus" - measuring some 18 feet high by 98 feet long - Okamoto’s incendiary artwork is an Awesome and universally understood indictment of the ultimate Dark power of nuclear warfare. Never Again. ( Level 7: A guerrilla street art commentary by the ChinPomu collective about the Fukushima disaster, designed to fit in seamlessly with the Myth of Tomorrow, was added to the base of Okamoto's work while exhibited at the Shibuya train station in Tokyo. Chin Pom's apt paste-up was left in view for only a few hours before being removed by the Authorities.) Read more at www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/the-atomic-artists/chimpom-art/#ixzz1kXg1SdBp; http://www.taromuseum.jp
http://www.tokyoreporter.com/2008/11/06/shibuya-set-for-one-final-explosion/
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