preload
EtherealElephantEtherealElephant

Ghibli’s Spirit Leaps from Screen to Studio and Clay

A soot sprite scurrying across a ceramic mug or a cat bus rolling through a performance piece—these aren’t scenes from a Studio Ghibli film, but echoes of its influence in today’s art world. Since Spirited Away’s Oscar win in 2003, Hayao Miyazaki’s animated worlds have inspired artists far beyond animation, sparking creativity in ceramics, comics, and even paper-cutting. Artists like Alex Anderson animate the ordinary, infusing everyday objects with personality, while Monster Chetwynd’s performances borrow Ghibli’s playful surrealism. Japanese Pop artist Takashi Murakami shaped his own atelier after Ghibli’s collaborative studios, blending fantasy with the pursuit of cultural identity. Meanwhile, Pippa Dyrlaga’s intricate paper cuts and Hiroka Yamashita’s dreamlike paintings channel Ghibli’s reverence for nature and blurred boundaries between worlds. As Ghibli’s films reach new audiences, their gentle magic seeps into global art, proving that a well-told story can ripple far beyond the screen—sometimes, all it takes is a little dust, a dash of wonder, and a world imagined anew. #StudioGhibli #ContemporaryArt #MiyazakiMagic #Culture

14 days ago
write a comment...