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Lady Aiko (also AIKO, born Aiko Nakagawa in 1975) is a Japanese street artist. ==Biography== Aiko Nakagawa was born in 1975 and raised in the central area of Tokyo. She attended an all-girl high school.〔 While she was in college in Tokyo, she created a pirate television station that broadcast her own music videos and short films. The broadcast could be picked up within a three-kilometre radius and generated some local press coverage before the government sent her a letter ordering her to desist. In the mid-1990s, she moved to New York City where she apprenticed in artist Takashi Murakami's Brooklyn studio.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.ladyaiko.com/introduction/ )〕 She studied media studies at the New School University〔 and wheatpasted naked images of herself around the city.〔 Towards the end of the 1990s Aiko collaborated with artists Patrick McNeil and Patrick Miller. The three formed the street art collective FAILE (then A-life) in 1998.〔 In 2005 she collaborated with fellow street artist Banksy for his film ''Exit Through the Gift Shop''. Lady Aiko left the collective in 2006. Aiko's work was included in the Museum of Sex's erotic street art exhibition in 2012. Later that year she created the mural ''Here's Fun for Everyone''〔 on New York City's Bowery Wall. She was the first woman artist to be invited to paint the wall. Aiko's work is inspired by 18th-century Japanese woodblock printing and has been described as "joyfully, subversively feminine".〔 Her solo artwork on canvas uses a bricolage technique, incorporating spray paint, stencilling, brushwork, collage, and serigraphs.〔 She attended the international street art festival Nuart in 2013 in Stavanger, Norway. Working on two walls of a tunnel below the Tou Scene arts centre, she created a work with stencilled representations of silhouettes, women, angels, Mount Fuji, butterflies, flowers and a rabbit holding an aerosol paint can. Aiko is based in Brooklyn, New York.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Lady Aiko」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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