HUMLEBÆK.- The major exhibition of the autumn at
Louisiana is the first comprehensive retrospective exhibition in Scandinavia of works by one of the great individualists of contemporary art, Japanese-born Yayoi Kusama (b. 1929). In recent decades Kusama has become world-famous for her artistic universe of radiantly coloured, riotously spreading patterns that cover the surfaces of paintings and sculptures and extend into all-encompassing installations where whole rooms, walls, floors and ceilings are covered in soft forms and dots starkly contrasting in black and yellow or white and red.
In the midst of this boundless visual universe stands Kusama herself; a strikingly present artistic persona who is often not only behind the works, but in front of them in photographs often dressed in clothes in the same pattern as the paintings, an artistic camouflage strategy that makes her merge visually with her art.
Themes in the exhibition
The exhibition Yayoi Kusama In Infinity, shown in the South Wing of the museum, unfolds the artists oeuvre in chronological order. A major theme of the exhibition is Kusamas enduring fascination with infinity which in her work is a spiritual idea, a cosmological space and a psychological abyss. This great nothingness exerts an attraction compounded of both desire and fearfulness, as reflected by many of her works.
The exhibition is built up of thematic impacts that focus on moments of radical innovation in Kusamas work. The first section, Sprouts, is dedicated to the works of her youth the earliest drawings and sketchbooks with nature subjects, which Kusama created as a self-taught artist in the Japanese provinces. The subsequent galleries focus on the ground-breaking change in Kusamas work in the late 1950s when she emigrated to the USA and became part of the New York avant-garde scene.
Under the theme heading Infinity a number of carefully selected works are shown from the painting series Infinity Nets, which became Kusamas breakthrough work. In the next gallery, Accumulations, stand soft, eroticized furnituresculptures covered in hundreds of white, penis-like shapes. Unlike the predominant currents in artistic milieux in New York, where Kusama got to know artists like Andy Warhol and Donald Judd, Kusamas work was seductive and physical. It was in this period that she developed the fundamental themes around which her lifes work still revolves: fantasies of infinity, dizzying psychological spaces into which one can disappear, and the desire to dissolve the ego and be swallowed up by the world.
The next space, The Priestess of the Polka Dots, unfurls through richly documented material, slide shows and rare, original design objects, the expanded practice into which Kusama progressed throughout the second half of the 1960s. She organized political protests, happenings and body-painting parties and established her own fashion design firm, Kusama Fashion Institute, all accompanied by a constant flow of press releases that functioned as marketing, artistic manifestos and social satire.
In addition, Louisiana show major works from the period when she was one of the first artists to develop the installation genre. Particularly worth singling out is the installation Polka Dot Love Room (1967), which has been radically restored for the Louisiana exhibition and will be shown in its entirety for the first time since the 1960s.
At the beginning of the 1970s Kusama returned to Japan. The next section, Cosmos, trains the spotlight on the turn that Kusamas work took through the 1980s. Now the nature motifs from the earliest period returned, but in large paintings and sculptures where the synthetic and the organic clash in wild combinations. Many of these works have never been shown outside Japan.
The last section of the exhibition, Kusamas world, focuses on the idea of self-obliteration in Kusamas contemporary work through performance videos and spatial installations. A special feature is the work Mirror Room (Pumpkin) (1991), an installation that was shown at the Venice Biennale in 1993 and helped to give Kusama the status on the global contemporary art scene that she has today. Finally, the exhibition shows works from the latest series of paintings, My Eternal Soul, on which Kusama is still working.
Kusama and fashion A special feature of this exhibition is the involvement of Kusamas work with fashion and design. The exhibition shows examples of Kusamas earliest, unique fashion design from the 1960s, when she created patterned avant-garde garments and costumes with close connections to her performances and happenings. In addition, we present the artists most recent design collaborations with among others Japanese Issey Miyake and the French fashion house Louis Vuitton in the latter case with a full-scale reproduction of a window decoration created for the fashion house a design with which Kusama inscribed herself in a wider history of avant-garde artists who through the years have taken an interest in the seductive space of the display window.
The exhibition is organised by Louisianas curator Marie Laurberg, who has stayed at the artists studio in Tokyo for her thorough research in Kusamas archives and works a. o. The exhibition includes archive material and several important works from the early period that have never been exhibited before.
The exhibition has been mounted against the background of generous loans from important museum collections in Japan, USA and Europe, as well as from private collections including the artists personal collection. Among the major works we can mention the psychedelic installation Polka Dot Love Room (1967), which has been restored for the exhibition and is presented in its entirety for the first time since 1967, as well as the polka-dotted installation Mirror Room (Pumpkin) (1991), which became an indicative work for Kusamas contemporary oeuvre.