Centre Pompidou
Paris
Place Georges Pompidou
01 44781233 FAX 01 44781302
WEB
Yayoi Kusama
dal 9/10/2011 al 8/1/2012
11am - 9pm every day, except Tuesday

Segnalato da

Sebastien Gravier


approfondimenti

Yayoi Kusama
Chantal Beret



 
calendario eventi  :: 




9/10/2011

Yayoi Kusama

Centre Pompidou, Paris

The exhibition, curated by Chantal Beret, maps the key points in the artists career, illustrating the protean nature (painting, sculpture, performance, environments...) of a body of work the artist herself describes as ''obsessional''. This characteristic is strongly connected to a childhood memory, a hallucination that stands at the root of her recurrent motif of the dot. ''My life is a dot lost among thousands of other dots'', she has said.


comunicato stampa

curated by Chantal Béret

The Centre Pompidou is to stage the first French retrospective devoted to Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama (born 1929): through a chronological display of some 150 works dating from 1949 to 2011, the exhibition pays tribute to an artist who stands apart, in a class of her own, yet one who has had a considerable influence on contemporary art from Andy Warhol to Mike Kelley, and who still attracts the interest of the rising generation. The exhibition then travels to the Reina Sofia Museum, Madrid, Tate Modern, London, and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. Each city will however make a distinctive contribution to the whole, as the display will vary from place to place: the Centre Pompidou for its part will put distinctive emphasis on Kusama’s sculpture and the experiments with colour represented by her monochromes. The exhibition maps the key points in the artists career, illustrating the protean nature (painting, sculpture, performance, environments…) of a body of work the artist herself describes as “obsessional.” This characteristic is strongly connected to a childhood memory, a hallucination that stands at the root of her recurrent motif of the dot. “My life is a dot lost among thousands of other dots,” she has said.

After an introductory section featuring her early, small-format works, notably a number of watercolours never yet seen in Europe, marked by a certain Surrealist influence, the exhibition falls into two major periods: exile in New York, and the return to Japan after 1973.

In collaboration with Tate Modern

Kusama’s whole work is organised in successive series

NEW YORK : 1958 -1973

INFINITY NETS SERIES: Having arrived in New York in 1958, the artist produced her first monochrome white, large-format Infinity Nets (sometimes reaching 11 m in length), an expression of her obsession with the infinite. In 1960 and 1961, she continued along on the same lines, but introducing colour (Infinity Nets Yellow, 1960, National Gallery of Art, Washington)..

ACCUMULATIONS SERIES : Kusama embarked on sculpture in 1961. Her textile sculptures are based on everyday objects picked up in the streets of New York (a sofa for the first, Accumulation No. 1, then a table, chair etc.), on which she clustered phallic forms in stuffed fabric. Aggregation: One Thousand Boats Show (1963, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam) is her first installation, returning to the principle of accumulation but deploying it to create an environment, images of a boat so treated being regularly repeated on the walls of the black box in which it is installed. Also on display will be another key work of this period, My Flower Bed (1962), from the Museum’s own collection.

HAPPENINGS AND PERFORMANCES : In 1966, Kusama began to stage her first happenings, inside her environments Peep Show and Phalli’s Field. Then came events in the New York streets, such as Walking Piece, 14th Street and the Anatomic Explosion series. The politically and sexually transgressive New York scene of the years of Peace and Love finds forceful expression in this element of her work.

JAPAN : 1973 - 2011 In 1973, Kusama returned definitively to Japan in a very fragile psychological state, the beginning of a period whose darkness is illustrated by a number of collages (War, 1977; I Who Committed Suicide, 1977, Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo). In 1977, she decided to live in a psychiatric hospital, where she has worked simultaneously in a number of different domains.

SOFT SCULPTURES : These organic forms in stuffed fabric are set horizontally on the floor, in random fashion, to occupy large spaces (Clouds, 1982, courtesy Ota Fine Arts, Tokyo; The Moment of Regeneration, 2004, courtesy Victoria Miro Gallery, London).

LARGE PAINTINGS : In the 1980s and ‘90s, Kusama produced very large-scale polyptychs that pursue the idea of repetition, paintings that suggest an endless expansion of the visual field (Yellow Trees, 1994, Forever Museum of Contemporary Art, Akita; Flame, 1992, private collection).

ENVIRONEMENTS : The artist has returned to the idea of her early New York experiments with total sculptures occupying entire spaces (floor, walls and ceiling), now playing with infinite repetitions of the dot though the use of mirrors and endless reflections (Dots Obsession, 1998, Les Abattoirs, Toulouse; Infinity Mirror Room, 2011, collection of the artist).

RECENT PAINTINGS : The exhibition at the Centre will also afford an unprecedented opportunity to see 31 recent paintings. Kusama visits her studio on a daily basis to paint on canvases set flat - a return to the tradition of Oriental painting and calligraphy. Sometimes producing at a rate of a painting a day, the artist understands this practice, like all her work, as an exorcism that allows her to bring out the inner chaos of her mind (Eyes of Mine, 2010; Spring Has Come, 2010, collection of the artist).

Press officer
Sébastien Gravier tel 00 33 (0)1 44784856 e-mail sebastien.gravier@centrepompidou.fr

Vernissage 10 october h 6p.m. to 9p.m.

Centre Pompidou
75191 Paris cedex 04
Opening
11am – 9pm every day, except Tuesday
Admission €10 - €12, depending on time, concessions €8 - €9
métro Hôtel de Ville, Rambuteau

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