Yayoi Kusama — "My infinity mirror rooms are like my brain - endless repetition with no escape."
My infinity mirror rooms are like my brain - endless repetition with no escape.
My infinity mirror rooms are like my brain - endless repetition with no escape.
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"I use polka dots to express my feelings about the universe."
"My body is covered in polka dots, and soon the whole world will be too."
"I wish to become one with the universe, to be absorbed in the cosmos."
"My life is a dot. It is just one dot, and it is a part of the universe."
"I am a flower that blooms in the dark."
Japanese contemporary artist whose Infinity Mirror Rooms and polka-dot installations have made her among the highest-grossing living artists, working from the Tokyo psychiatric hospital where she has lived voluntarily since 1977. Closely associated with Donald Judd (early NYC champion of her work) and Andy Warhol (1960s NYC contemporary). For an intellectual contrast, see the 1960s New York Pop establishment, the male-dominated, gallery-political art world that excluded her — Kusama claims Warhol's Cow Wallpaper and Oldenburg's soft sculptures borrowed her ideas without credit. Her 1960s erasure from the canon — and later prominence as the highest-grossing living woman artist — is one of art history's most-cited cases of gendered authorship dispute.
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