James Marshall, commonly know as the artist Dalek, made his mark in the art world with his iconic Space Monkey character, which looks like a catatonic, twisted mouse. “The Space Monkey is my concept of a human being,” he says. “It’s a tool for relaying and exploring ideas.”

Marshall grew up in a military family, and his childhood was punctuated by drastic moves every couple of years. He has lived up and down the East Coast, and ended his high school years in Japan. He turned to the subcultures of punk rock, skateboarding, and graffiti for inclusion and identity.

He earned his bachelor’s degree in anthropology and sociology from Virginia Commonwealth University in 1992, and received his Bachelor of Fine Arts from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1995. That same year he developed his Space Monkey character. Taking up the name “Dalek,” Marshall merged street art, cartoons, Japanese Pop, and the energy of the urban punk scene.

A major turning point in Dalek’s studio practice was working as Takashi Murakami’s assistant in 2001.

Rendered in a minimalist, flat style, Dalek used the Space Monkey like an alter ego, a visual manifestation of his feelings, as well as a testament to his love for the absurdity of human interactions.