
Legends: Japan’s Most Notable Names
Love Forever: The Genius of Kusama Yayoi
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In 2016, at the age of 87, Kusama Yayoi was awarded the highest national honor a Japanese artist can receive, the Order of Culture. Born in 1929 to a distinguished and prosperous family in the city of Matsumoto in Nagano Prefecture, Kusama achieved artistic success early on in a career that has reached its zenith over the past decade. Taken alone, such facts might lead one to surmise that she has led a charmed life, that her road to success has been an easy one. That would be very far off the mark.
In fact, Kusama’s life has been a series of bitter struggles. She has had to battle a debilitating psychiatric disorder that has plagued her since childhood, as well as the prejudice and misunderstanding of those around her. But from these trials emerged her dedication to art as a vehicle for an enduring message of salvation through love, along with a capacity to strike a deep chord in viewers the world over.
Unbearable Whereabouts of Love, 2014. From the series My Eternal Soul. (© Yayoi Kusama)
I first met—or perhaps I should say saw—Kusama Yayoi in 1976, a few years after she had returned to Japan from the United States. Attending an exhibition of some small collages of hers at a gallery in Ginza, I spied her diminutive form huddled in a corner. I was young and unknown and too intimidated by her celebrity (including rumors of shocking “happenings” and other scandalous doings in New York City) to approach her. But the impact of the work I saw on that occasion was life changing. The profound lyricism and almost electrifying sensuality of her canvases instantly vanquished my prejudices.
Kusama in her New York Studio in 1961 with several large Infinity Netspaintings covering the wall behind her. (© Yayoi Kusama)
I began working as a curator soon after that, and for the rest of my career I dedicated myself (with a zeal some must have found amusing) to the mission of restoring this renegade genius to a place of honor in the international art community—not as an isolated outsider, as she was frequently characterized, but as a pivotal figure in the development of postwar art. It was not that others failed to appreciate Kusama’s special qualities but that they defined her contribution as that of as an “interesting” provocateur and no more.
Today, I am happy to say, Kusama has finally secured widespread recognition as an artist deserving of such epithets as “great” and “sublime.” This is partly because her work, far from declining in vigor, has actually scaled a second summit since she entered her ninth decade. But it is also because her longstanding message of “forever love” has taken on new importance and significance at a time when intolerance and hate are on the rise everywhere.
All the Eternal Love I Have for the Pumpkins, 2016. From the series Infinity Mirror Rooms. (© Yayoi Kusama)
The Avant-garde for All
As I suggested above, Kusama Yayoi’s art, with its message of boundless love, is inextricably tied up with her private obsessions and compulsions. Even as a child, Kusama was assailed by frightening hallucinations in which a floral pattern proliferated and filled up the room until she herself was obliterated. She seems to have found relief in a kind of intuitive art therapy, drawing and painting the very visions that terrified her. The repeating dots and web-like patterns for which she is renowned cropped up in her artwork as early as elementary school.
The large-scale Infinity Nets paintings of Kusama’s New York years, noted for their “simple yet complex” latticework of tiny forms, can be seen as products of this longstanding kenophobic compulsion to fill up empty space. At the same time, the “all-over” style of this series, with its uniform treatment of the picture surface, coincided with an important phase in the New York school of contemporary painting, a transition between action painting that highlighted dynamic brushstrokes and the spare minimalism of the 1960s and early 1970s. This is evidence that Kusama was no isolated eccentric sealed up in her own shell but a legitimate historical actor channeling the dialectic forces that propel the development of art.
Similar observations apply to Kusama’s Accumulations, another well-known group of artworks from Kusama’s New York years. With their reuse of everyday objects, these soft-sculpture furnishings and installations presaged key developments in the Pop art movement. At the same time, the disturbing sexual imagery of the phallic forms encrusting the surface of these objects was a highly individual feature, speaking strongly to Kusama’s own personal obsessions.
Narcissus Garden, 1966. For this installation-cum-performance staged at the 33rd Venice Biennale, Kusama placed 1,500 mirror balls on the lawn and sold them individually to visitors in a satirical comment on the commercialism of the contemporary art scene. (© Yayoi Kusama)
Kusama in her New York studio in 1963, surrounded by her soft sculptures. (© Yayoi Kusama)
As this suggests, the desire to find release from oppressive feelings and visions is clearly an important motive force behind Kusama’s art. But her greatness lies in her ability to sublimate her compulsion into a universal prayer for salvation, for herself and for the world as a whole. Even during the antiwar “happenings” staged in New York in the late 1960s, when Kusama may have appeared isolated from society, she was no alienated outsider but a standard bearer of the “avant-garde for all,” actively conveying the same message of love that she continues to disseminate today.
“Anti-War Naked Happening and Flag Burning on the Brooklyn Bridge,” 1968. Kusama has explained that she wanted to call attention to the beauty of the human body and the tragedy of sending young people to die in Vietnam as part of an "antiwar message promoting peace, love, and freedom from the shackles of social convention." (© Yayoi Kusama)