In infinity: Yayoi Kusama’s dots take over the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art
The Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Humlebæk, near Copenhagen, Denmark, is hosting the first large-scale exhibition of Kusama’s work in Scandinavia. 'In Infinity' is a true retrospective of the artist’s life, traversing her early watercolours to her psychedelic work in the 1960s, political commentaries from the 1970s and her later, Toyko-based pieces from the 1980s. A sprinkling of design and fashion – most notably collaborations with Louis Vuitton and Issey Miyake – make an appearance also.
‘The poster girls for the globalisation of contemporary art’, ‘the polka-dot princess’, one of the world’s most famous female artists; call Yayoi Kusama what you will, there's no denying her omnipotence. Celebrating her achievements and talents, the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Humlebæk, near Copenhagen, Denmark, is hosting the first large-scale exhibition of Kusama’s work in Scandinavia.
'In Infinity' is a true retrospective of the artist’s life, traversing her early watercolours to her psychedelic work in the 1960s, political commentaries from the 1970s and her later, Toyko-based pieces from the 1980s. A sprinkling of design and fashion – most notably collaborations with Louis Vuitton and Issey Miyake – make an appearance also. ‘The exhibition traces Kusama's lifelong interest in the concept of Infinity,’ explains curator Marie Laurberg, ‘which in her work figures both as a spiritual idea, a boundless universe and a psychological abyss.’
While Kusama’s early, avant-garde work in New York may be what shot her to fame, it is not the sole focus of this presentation. ‘The exhibition holds many works from the early period which were rarely if ever exhibited before,’ explains Laurberg. ‘It also focuses on the change in Kusama's artistic practice when she returned to Japan in the early 1970s.’ (Kusama famously returned to Japan for medical treatment to find her art was not embraced by her countrymen. She has since then voluntarily lived in a mental institution, keeping a studio nearby which allows her to continue working. Age has done nothing to slow down the octogenarian artist.) ‘Many of these works from her Tokyo period were never shown outside of Japan before,’ says Laurberg.
Most recent of all are the paints of the ongoing series My Eternal Soul, which Kusama started in 2009. ‘[It is] almost like a visual diary,’ says Laurberg. ‘These colourful paintings are composed horizontally, moving around the canvas in an associative, unbroken creative process, and in them you can trace many shapes and motives by which Kusama reconnects with her very earliest drawings.’
While there is no doubt that her immersive installations of endless dots, nets and mirrored spaces are a huge draw (they have previously drawn record-breaking crowds to exhibitions around the world, including London’s Tate, New York’s MoMA and Moscow’s Garage, to name a few) it is the astounding life this woman continues to lead that will inspire visitors to linger.
INFORMATION
‘Yayoi Kusama: In Infinity’ is on show until 24 January 2016
ADDRESS
Louisiana Museum of Modern Art
Gammel Strandvej 13
DK 3050, Humlebæk
Wallpaper* Newsletter
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
-
A new Oxford Street pop-up celebrates IKEA's blue bags
IKEA's iconic blue bag gets its own pop-up concept store, the 'Hus of Frakta'.
By Smilian Cibic Published
-
Audemars Piguet and Kaws have created the Royal Oak Concept watch we didn't know we needed
The Audemars Piguet x Kaws Royal Oak Concept Tourbillon 'Companion' is slick wrist-worn art
By Thor Svaboe Published
-
A friendly rivalry coloured by kinship: Wendy Maruyama and Tom Loeser on their two-artist show
'I wanted to make furniture, just not traditional furniture, but weird furniture,' says Wendy Maruyama on ‘Colorama’, a two-artist show presented at design gallery Superhouse (until 11 January 2025)
By Gregory Han Published
-
‘Gas Tank City’, a new monograph by Andrew Holmes, is a photorealist eye on the American West
‘Gas Tank City’ chronicles the artist’s journey across truck-stop America, creating meticulous drawings of fleeting moments
By Jonathan Bell Published
-
Intimacy, violence and the uncanny: Joanna Piotrowska in Philadelphia
Artist and photographer Joanna Piotrowska stages surreal scenes at the Institute of Contemporary Art at the University of Pennsylvania
By Hannah Silver Published
-
First look: Sphere’s new exterior artwork draws on a need for human connection
Wallpaper* talks to Tom Hingston about his latest large-scale project – designing for the Exosphere
By Charlotte Gunn Published
-
Marc Hom reframes traditional portraiture in Cooperstown, NY
‘Marc Hom: Re-Framed’ has taken over the grounds of the Fenimore Art Museum, Cooperstown, planting Samuel L Jackson, Gwyneth Paltrow and more ‘personalities of the world’ into the landscape
By Hannah Hutchings-Georgiou Published
-
Alexander May, founder of LA studio Sized, on the joys of creative polymathy
Creative director Alexander May tells us of the multidisciplinary approach that drives his LA studio Sized and its offspring, a 5,000 sq ft event space and an exhibition series
By Hannah Silver Published
-
50 of America’s top creatives, photographed by Inez & Vinoodh
Photographed exclusively for Wallpaper* by Inez & Vinoodh, we present a portfolio of 50 creatives driving the current discourse on American culture and its dynamic evolution
By Dan Howarth Published
-
Nona Faustine confronts the past in New York
Artist Nona Faustine reframes New York's colonial past in an exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum
By Hannah Silver Published
-
How the west won: Ivan McClellan is amplifying the intrepid beauty of Black cowboy culture
In his new book, 'Eight Seconds: Black Cowboy Culture', Ivan McClellan draws us into the world of Black rodeo. Wallpaper* meets the photographer ahead of his Juneteenth Rodeo
By Tracy Kawalik Published