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Japanese Demons Ball Out in Retro–Futuristic Illustrations

'Edo Ball' puts the contemporary spin of basketball on the Japanese art style of ukiyo-e.
All images courtesy Andrew Archer

Ukiyo-e, the iconic woodblock-print art style of Japan, has almost nothing in common with basketball, a sport utterly foreign to the country until long after the art medium fell out of style in the 19th century at the end of the Edo period. But the cultural void between the two didn't stop artist Andrew Archer from creating Edo Ball, a series of prints fusing the aesthetic qualities of ukiyo-e with the modernized subject matter of B-ball.

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Edo Ball isn't a one-to-one transference of courtside basketball scenes into a Japanese artistic style. Archer's scenes are highly surreal concoctions, often with a hallucinatory, otherworldly feel to them. In The Bunny, a huge, anthropomorphized rabbit prepares to shoot a hoop while standing on a crumbling plank in the middle of the ocean. The Ghost shows a player mid-dunk, an otherwise standard scene if said player wasn't a human skeleton wearing Jordans and a headband, surrounded in lightning.

The Object of Desire, Andrew Archer

While the seemingly unorthodox combinations inherent to Edo Ball produce an aesthetically pleasing and unique new result, there still remains the questions as to why a New Zealand artist would fuse the two in such a way. Archer believes he is paying an homage to both cultural staples:

"I'm inspired by both individually, in a big way. I've played basketball my entire life, and I am a huge fan of basketball and Japanese art. I lived in Asia previously and the culture of Japan and their approach to arts have always amazed me," the artist explains to Creators. "The dedication to the craft, the storytelling, and the stylistic values of ukiyo-e are so inspiring to me."

The Klaw, Andrew Archer

Surprisingly, Archer believes his subjects aren't as disparate as one might think: "The two actually tied together in more ways than I first imagined. The personalities and nicknames of basketball players merge nicely with the common subjects of ukiyo-e, and from a stylistic standpoint, the energy and exaggeration of basketball can be expressed freely," he adds.

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The Rock, Andrew Archer

To truly solidify the work as his own, Archer has even added stylistic elements from his own upbringing to the works: "A lot of the tattoos on the artworks are referenced from traditional Maori and Pacific Island tattoo and art, both of which are equally beautiful cultures present in my life growing up in New Zealand. I think it's important to mix traditions both old and new, and also to mix cultures, both in art and also in our day to day lives."

The Reign, Andrew Archer

The Splash Bros, Andrew Archer

The Ghost, Andrew Archer

The Bunny, Andrew Archer

Check out Edo Ball on the project's website, where you can also purchase prints, postcards, and T-shirts of the works. More of Andrew Archer's artwork can be seen here.

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