A small porcelain mug based on Yoshitomo Nara's We Are Punks (2011), a colour-pencil drawing of a defiant, round-headed child whose expression falls somewhere between a lullaby and a battle cry. The piece belongs to a body of work where Nara channels the raw energy of the punk and folk records he grew up listening to on U.S. Armed Forces radio in rural Aomori, a thread that runs from his earliest sketchbooks to his large-scale canvases and limited editions.
Crafted in Hasami ware from Nagasaki Prefecture, the mug is dishwasher and microwave safe. The clay is fired and glazed in Japan using techniques passed down through four centuries of potters in the hills above Nagasaki. The result is a clean white body, light but solid in the hand, with a matte finish that lets the illustration sit naturally on the surface rather than floating under a layer of gloss.
Peek inside once you have finished your espresso and you will find one of Nara's girls staring back at you from the bottom of the cup, as if she got there first and has no intention of leaving. It is a small, private encounter: exactly the kind of moment Nara builds into his work. His figures never perform for a crowd; they address you one-on-one, and finding one at the bottom of a coffee cup is about as intimate as it gets.
At 200 cc, this is the mug for the person who believes rebellion comes in small doses. It stacks neatly on top of the large version, so the two sit together like a pair of misfit best friends. Nara has often said that album covers were his earliest art gallery, and he went on to design sleeves for Shonen Knife, R.E.M., and Bloodthirsty Butchers. That crossover between music and visual art places him in a lineage that stretches from Andy Warhol's Velvet Underground banana to Raymond Pettibon's Black Flag flyers — artists for whom everyday objects carry as much weight as anything hanging in a museum.
Nara is often discussed alongside figures like Takashi Murakami and the Superflat movement, though his work has always been more private than programmatic. For a deeper look at how Murakami's editions are produced and numbered, our guide to Takashi Murakami's limited editions covers everything from offset lithography to silkscreen techniques. Collectors drawn to the softer, more uncanny side of Nara's influence will also find good company in Roby Dwi Antono's sculptures and prints. But start here: 200 cc of Hasami porcelain, one defiant girl at the bottom of the cup, and all the attitude of a three-chord song.