Based in Sapporo Japan, Ryoko Suzuki attacks the stereotype that the Japanese "Powers that Be" impose on females in Japanese culture. Centering on the childrens toy industry, she utilizes the female toy form and superimposes her face onto that form. Completly in character, she mimicks the doll, giving a human face to an otherwise plastic form. The form, seductive and sexualized is originally meant for Japanese girls. It sends the message, of how the men of her culture wish their females to look, dress and behave.

Common to Japanese Anime, the figures can be nude, or in costume, or in a feminine "cute" pose. Photographed against a pastel background, the figures take on a surreal, if not painted feeling offset by the reality of the human face. The prints stand 8 feet tall, or wide, thus evoking the "gaze". They overtake the viewer, invite them in and create tension when context is realized.