Pop Shop Robot Baby Romper
Pop Shop Robot Baby Romper
Regular price
¥3,300 JPY
Regular price
Sale price
¥3,300 JPY
Unit price
/
per
Pop ShopOriginal romper.
100% COTTON
White
Double-needle hemmed sleeves, a three-snap bottom and flatlock seams.
[Caution]
This product is for kids.
Please be very careful when purchasing.
Also, please note that we cannot accept returns or refunds after purchase.
This product is for kids.
Please be very careful when purchasing.
Also, please note that we cannot accept returns or refunds after purchase.
[What is Pop Shop?]
In the early 1980s, he became famous for "Subway Drawing," which he drew on the black paper that was posted on the billboards on the subway in New York. Became Keith Haring.
But. As soon as his name became known to the world, contrary to Haring's wishes, subway drawings were illegally taken from the subway one after another and resold. Haring quit subway drawing in 1986 and started a new art project for communication. That's the "pop shop".
Goods designed by himself, such as can badges, postcards, T-shirts, and small radios, were displayed in a shop with drawings of Haring from the ceiling to the floor. Following in the footsteps of Andy Warhol, who turned American consumer culture into a sublime art, in an era without the internet or iPod, he decided to sell 100 million yen of art to a single collector instead of selling it to a single dollar collector. I thought about distributing art to 100 million people.
In the early 1980s, he became famous for "Subway Drawing," which he drew on the black paper that was posted on the billboards on the subway in New York. Became Keith Haring.
But. As soon as his name became known to the world, contrary to Haring's wishes, subway drawings were illegally taken from the subway one after another and resold. Haring quit subway drawing in 1986 and started a new art project for communication. That's the "pop shop".
Goods designed by himself, such as can badges, postcards, T-shirts, and small radios, were displayed in a shop with drawings of Haring from the ceiling to the floor. Following in the footsteps of Andy Warhol, who turned American consumer culture into a sublime art, in an era without the internet or iPod, he decided to sell 100 million yen of art to a single collector instead of selling it to a single dollar collector. I thought about distributing art to 100 million people.