Mirrored Years
Curated by Jaap Guldemond, (Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam) Franck Gautherot, Kim Seungduk (Le Consortium, Dijon).
The Mirrored Years exhibition of work by the celebrated Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama
confronts early installations, films and sculptures from the 1960s with recent
works. The exhibition reveals the coherence of Kusama's oeuvre over the years while
at the same time highlighting the freshness and innovative nature of certain themes
explored in her work. Working in a highly idiosyncratic formal idiom and exploiting
many different techniques, Kusama's work is the product of a lifelong interest in
visual perception and sensory experiences.
Mirrored Years demonstrates the abiding force of Yayoi Kusama. The juxtaposition of
renowned installations such as the 'Infinity Mirror Room – Phalli's Field' (1965) or
'Narcissus Garden' (1966) with recent mirror installations such as 'Fireflies on the
Water' and 'Invisible Life' (2000) as well as new sculptures such as 'Soaring
Spirits' (2008-2009) provides insight into a career spanning more than 40 years.
Besides the abovementioned works, Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen is presenting
various other sculptures, films and happenings created by Kusama in the 1960s in
conjunction with comparable works from recent years. The museum is also showing
Kusama's most recent work: an installation of 50 new paintings that she has been
producing assiduously over the last three years.
Confrontation
Yayoi Kusama appeared on the international art scene in the 1960s with much panache,
shortly after moving from Japan to New York. She established her name with her
enormous 'Infinity Net' paintings and her gallery-filling installations, which
ensconce the visitor in thousands of colourful little stuffed textile protrusions –
often phallus-like. Kusama's fame also spread thanks to the succès de scandale
surrounding her public happenings, which have included men and women performing
naked in the streets of New York. Yayoi Kusama was embraced by all the important
American artists of the era: Pop Artists such as Claes Oldenburg and Andy Warhol,
leading American Abstractionists such as Barnett Newmann and Mark Rothko, and
artists of a younger generation such as Donald Judd and Dan Flavin.
In 1962, Yayoi Kusama was the only female artist to take part in the widely
acclaimed 'Nul' (Zero) international group exhibition at the Stedelijk Museum in
Amsterdam. She has exhibited alongside European artists including Lucio Fontana, Pol
Bury, Otto Piene and Gunther Uecker, as well as with artists from the Dutch Nul
group (closely aligned with the German Zero movement), such as Jan Schoonhoven and
Henk Peeters. Yayoi Kusama was a regular exhibitor on the Dutch art scene in the
1960s and '70s. She developed a close friendship with Henk Peeters and Jan
Schoonhoven and in those days she exercised considerable influence on the
development of Dutch art.
Experience
In 1973, mental health problems prompted Kusama to return to Japan, where she
continued to play a prominent role in the world of art. In the West she gradually
disappeared from the radar until about a decade ago, when a new art public became
acquainted with her work. Working across several disciplines, Kusama continues to
develop an increasingly diverse, rich and multilayered oeuvre. Her interest in
sensory experiences and space-filling installations combined with her radical and
obsessive history has had a marked impact on a number of prominent trends in
contemporary art. Her work strikes a chord with modern-day artists as much as with
fashion designers such as Marc Jacobs and pop musicians such as Peter Gabriel.
The Mirrored Years exhibition has been realised with the support of the Mondriaan
Foundation and the Japan Foundation in the Netherlands.
Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
Museumpark 18-20 - Rotterdam