
In the late 90s, when toy figures consisted mainly of superheroes, robots, anime/movie characters, and Barbie/Ken-types, Lau created figures that were a reflection of the thriving youth culture. Instead of metallic armors and space suits, his toy figures wore hoodies, hip-hop jeans, chains, earrings, tattoos and cool rubber shoes. They were known as the 12-inch Gardeners, a collection of 100+ 'cool dudes' that were rare as they were unique.
Today, you won't be able to get hold of one – they are completely sold out, and no collector will ever want to part with his. You have better chances of scoring a 6-inch vinyl version. Below are two of them – Box B (with the recycling symbol) and Box C (with his pants down).


A Michael Lau Bearbrick that I'm really dying to have (in case they decide to mass produce it in a smaller size) is the one below – a 24-inch one-of-a-kind bear that was part of the Bearbrick Worldwide Tour exhibition.
A Bearbrick packed with Lau's originality, no less.

Drats! For a minute there I thought you were going to touch upon the issue: open or do not open the be@r. I've seen a "we're not worthy" collection of every single bear (yes someone out there has done it). I've also seen some exciting collections of bears though each in the original packaging. The dilemma...
ReplyDeleteDon't worry, bbx, I hope to cover that topic very soon. :-)
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