True to form, Takashi Murakami finished working on his latest exhibit just six hours before its debut to the press Wednesday. The 46-year-old Japanese pop artist, known for his anime- and manga-inspired paintings and sculptures – along with his modded Louis Vuitton accessories – will be honored in a retrospective at the Brooklyn Museum that opens to the public Saturday.

©Murakami features 90-plus works from the artist's 16-year career. The show is the second Murakami retrospective in the United States (the first was held at the Los Angeles MoCA last fall).

Like the MoCA exhibit, the Brooklyn Museum will get a functioning Louis Vuitton store selling Murakami's wallets and bags made for the luxe label, as well as monogrammed canvases (a collaboration between Murakami and Vuitton designer Marc Jacobs).

The new monogrammed canvases feature a camouflage design, fitting as the LV store will donate a portion of proceeds generated during the museum's gala event Thursday night to the Federal Enforcement Homeland Security Foundation. While the FEHSF may sound frightening, it's actually a small charity that offers financial assistance to the families of those in law enforcement.

After the jump, a sneak peek at what's on display at the exhibit. Some photos are NSFW.

Left: Murakami's trademark smiling flowers serve as wallpaper behind paintings of his characters, Kiki and Kaikai. Right: This 13-foot-tall fiberglass-and-resin sculpture features Murakami's flowers.

Murakami goes large with his anime-inspired ko2 series. The fiberglass-and-synthetic-resin figures rise to 9 feet.

Hirpon is another of Murakami's fiberglass giants. Seeing this lady in photos truly doesn't compare to seeing her in the fiberglass flesh. Disturbing and beautiful all at the same time.

My Lonesome Cowboy marks 1998 as Murakami's "body fluid" period.

A Louis Vuitton store springs up in the Brooklyn Museum.

Custom-made Murakami murals line the Brooklyn Museum's stairwell.

*Top photo: *Tan Tan Bo *by *Takashi Murakami, 2001, acrylic on canvas mounted on board, 141 3/4 inches by 212 5/8 inches by 2 5/8 inches. Collection of John A. Smith and Victoria Hughes, courtesy Tomio Konyama Gallery, Tokyo, ©2001 Takashi Murakami/Kaikai Kiki Co. All rights reserved.

All other photos: Sonia Zjawinski/Wired.com

See also: