Lot 122
  • 122

Yayoi Kusama

Estimate
700,000 - 1,000,000 USD
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Description

  • Yayoi Kusama
  • Infinity-Nets [TSSXPZ]
  • signed twice, titled and dated 2007 on the reverse
  • acrylic on canvas
  • 63 by 51 1/4 in. 160 by 130.3 cm.

Provenance

Private Collection, Tokyo

Condition

This work is in very good condition overall. The edges of the canvas are taped. The color is bright, fresh and clean. There is evidence of light wear and handling along the edges including some pinpoint paint losses at the edges. Under Ultraviolet light inspection, there is no evidence of restoration. Framed under Plexiglas. Please note this work is accompanied by a registration card issued by the Yayoi Kusama Studio.
In response to your inquiry, we are pleased to provide you with a general report of the condition of the property described above. Since we are not professional conservators or restorers, we urge you to consult with a restorer or conservator of your choice who will be better able to provide a detailed, professional report. Prospective buyers should inspect each lot to satisfy themselves as to condition and must understand that any statement made by Sotheby's is merely a subjective qualified opinion.
NOTWITHSTANDING THIS REPORT OR ANY DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING CONDITION OF A LOT, ALL LOTS ARE OFFERED AND SOLD "AS IS" IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF SALE PRINTED IN THE CATALOGUE.

Catalogue Note

“Kusama is the Infinity Net and the polka dot, two interchangeable motifs that she adopted as her alter ego, her logo, her franchise and her weapon of incursion into the world at large. The countless artworks that she has produced and that carry Kusama’s nets and dots into the world, when seen as a whole are the mere results of a rigorously disciplined and single-minded performance that has lasted for almost fifty years.” Laura Hoptman, Yayoi Kusama, London, 2000, p. 14

Infinity-Nets [TSSXPZ] is an example of Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama’s most personal and renowned body of work. Painted in 2007, this work directly relates to the Infinity Net canvases the artist began painting in New York in the late 1950s. The intricate interweaving of dots and nets shows a mature manifestation of the artist’s original concept. Gazing upon this work we are sent down the intimate spiraling staircase of Kusama’s brilliant, complicated mind. Enchanted by these nets, a viewer becomes lost in their own personal associations and mesmerized by a mixture of abstraction, ethereality and true infiniteness. Kusama commented on the all-encompassing nature of her work in a 2000 interview with art historian, writer, and poet Akira Tatehata, “I am not concerned with Surrealism, Pop Art, Minimal Art or whatever. I am so absorbed in living my life” (Laura Hoptman, Yayoi Kusama, London, 2000, p. 14). As she is absorbed in ‘living her life,’ finding solace and easing her anxiety through her art, we too become absorbed in the work before us. Engulfed in a world of net and dots, a viewer becomes transfixed, as the work oscillates before our very eyes. 

Growing up in Japan, Yayoi Kusama felt ostracized by Japanese society as a result of her mental illness and was harshly treated by her mother. In 1958, at 27 years old, Kusama moved to New York City seeking refuge from her depersonalization attacks, her family, and her home country and aspired to accomplish something marvelous and become celebrated for it. It was during this time, in the late 1950s and early 1960s, that she developed the Infinity Net and the polka dot motifs that came to her in visions and occupied a large part of her conscience. As these patterns represented a constant hallucinatory vision for Kusama, she painted proliferating nets and dots in order to relieve her psychosomatic anxiety. Tatehata commented in her interview with Kusama about the unique way she confronts her anxiety, “You attempt to flee from psychic obsession by choosing to paint the very vision of fear, from which one would ordinarily avert one’s eyes.” Kusama responds, “I paint them in quantity; in doing so, I try to escape” (ibid.). Through this escape, Kusama is not only able to alleviate her own mental anguish, but also showcase her ability to create a mesmerizing visual language that entrances the viewer.

In New York, Kusama met other great artistic visionaries who became her friends, lovers, and supporters. This circle included Lucio Fontana, Joseph Cornell, Larry Rivers, John Chamberlain, On Kawara, and Donald Judd. Kawara, when living upstairs from Kusama in SoHo, helped mitigate her nightly attacks that often ended in trips to the hospital. She met her first boyfriend, Donald Judd, while he was an art critic and studying at Columbia University. Judd celebrated Kusama’s work in an October 1959 edition of Artnews, “Yayoi Kusama is an original painter. The expression transcends the question of whether it is Oriental or American. Although it is something of both, certainly of such Americans as Rothko, Still and Newman, it is not at all a synthesis and is thoroughly independent” (Donald Judd, “Reviews and Previews: New Names This Month—Yayoi Kusama,” Artnews 58, No. 6, October 1959). This ‘thoroughly independent’ work is not only vastly art historically interesting, but also, and more importantly for Kusama, a form of self-therapy; a way for the artist to find a sense of calm and a peace of mind through this process she calls ‘self-obliteration.'

Kusama, throughout her long and prolific career, has been categorized as a Surrealist, Pop artist, Feminist, and Fetishist among other labels. However, even now, at the age of 86, she refuses to be singularly characterized by any of the above. In the artist’s 2000 interview with Tatehata, Kusama expresses her distaste for being defined: “Nowadays, some people in New York call me a “Surrealist-Pop’ artist. I do not care for this kind of labeling…People are confused and don’t know how to understand me” (Op. Cit., p. 14). Throughout her entire life, even with her renowned artistic practice and critically acclaimed career, Kusama has in many ways been an outsider. Perhaps this is the reason Infinity-Nets [TSSXPZ] and the Infinity Nets series as a whole continue to intrigue and allure us; they give a viewer a glimpse into the very special, intimate world of Kusama.