Yayoï Kusama, early works, accumulation and « self-obliteration » concept

Publié le 07 août 2012 par Christianpoulot @lemodalogue


Yayoi Kusama, New-Yorc city, july 10, 2012

Yayoi Kusama arrived in New-York in 1957. I’ve always been fascinated by accumulation and repetition (I am a big fan of Andy Warhol’s Campbell’s Soup silkscreens). The works I show here are my favorites, they are part of the exhibition set at the Whitney Museum

From the « Infinity Nets » paintings to the « Accumulation » works (all shown below) you see the beginnings of the « dots », of the happenings and the « self-obliteration » concept. You imagine the struggle the artist had to do to make a living from her work (being an ‘outsider’, an artist and independant asian women in the seventies in NYC was not easy).

I spent a lot of time contemplating these paintings below.


NO.White A.Z 1958, 1959 and NO.A.B, 1959

These paintings (above) are part of « Infinity Nets » series, first exhibited in 1959 and first success of the artist in America and Europe.


Pacific Ocean, 1960

These large-scale paintings are iterations of the same gesture, obsessive and meditative, a subtle movement of the wrist.

Below, Kusama’s drawings and notes


A letter from painter Georgia O’Keeffe admired by Yayoi Kusama


Adam Weinberg, director of the Withney museum  (during the press conference)


David Kiehl, curator of the exhibition (during the press conference)

At the beginning of the sixties Yayoi Kusama began a new body of work, the Accumulation sculptures. The artist use her complexes and fear as subjects, the phallus or the industrially producted food (macaroni).

« I make them and make them, and then keep on making them, until i bury myself in the process. I call this ‘obliteration’ »  (Yayoi Kusama, Infinity Net)


Phallic dress, c. 1968, Phallic handbag, c.1968 and Phallic shoe, c.1968


Macaroni pants, 1968


Untitled accumulation, 1963

Flower overcoat, 1964


Accumulation No. 2, 1962


Air mail stickers, 1962

At the end of the sixties, Kusama is well exposed in the art world, but not fully accepted. The socio-political world was changing (think Vietnam, civil rights movements), she must find a new way of keeping interest on her work. She started to make happenings and performative experimentation, perfectly connected with the rising hippie scene.

In 1969, Yayoi Kusama open a clothing boutique to sell her fashion designs. Most of the garment were covered with polka dots (remember the Louis Vuitton’s pop-up store?) or sexually daring.


Kusama’s daring fashion


Naked performances

In 1969, Kusama’s name became so connected with sex happenings and daring attitudes than her name was licensed to a pornographic tabloid, « Kusama Orgy ».

In the early 1970, über exposed, depressive and suffering from increasing pressure, Yayoi Kusama returned home and started a new era of works.