03/13/2024
March is women’s history month - let’s celebrate! 🎉
Yayoi Kusama (1929 - ), sometimes called “the Princess of polka-dots” is a Japanese contemporary artist who works primarily in sculpture and installation, and is also active in painting, performance art, video art, fashion, poetry, fiction, and other arts. Her work is based in conceptual art and shows some attributes of feminism, minimalism, surrealism, pop art and abstract expressionism, and is infused with autobiographical, psychological, and sexual content.
She has been acknowledged as one of the most important living artists to come out of Japan, the world's top-selling female artist, and the world's most successful living artist.
Kusama has been open about her mental health and has resided since the 1970s in a mental health facility which she leaves daily to walk to her nearby studio to work. She says that art has become her way to express her mental problems. “I fight pain, anxiety, and fear every day, and the only method I have found that relieved my illness is to keep creating art," she told an interviewer in 2012. "I followed the thread of art and somehow discovered a path that would allow me to live."
Kusama tells the story of how when she was a little girl she had a hallucination that freaked her out. She was in a field of flowers when they all started talking to her! The heads of flowers were like dots that went on as far as she could see, and she felt as if she was disappearing or as she calls it ‘self-obliterating’ – into this field of endless dots. This experience influenced much of her later work.
By adding all-over marks and dots to her paintings, drawings, objects and clothes she feels as if she is making them (and herself) melt into, and become part of, the bigger universe.
Today, we share with you “The Infinite Room of Mirrors - Phallus Field” 1965.
If you’re interested in learning more about Yayoi Kusama and her body of work, check out:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yayoi_Kusama