Introduction to Yayoi Kusama Yayoi Kusama’s polka dot art Yayoi Kusama’s pumpkin

Chinese name: Yayoi Kusama

Foreign name: Yayoi Kusama

Nationality: Japanese

Occupation: Artist

< p> Graduated from: Matsumoto Girls' School, Nagano Prefecture, Japan

Representative works: Paintings "Flower (D.S.P.S)" and "Infinity Mirrored Room" Main achievements In 1968, "Eliminate Oneself "Won a silver medal.

In 1957, she was known as the "avant-garde queen".

In 1951, his work "The Wandering Dream" was selected.

Yayoi Kusama was born in Matsumoto City, Nagano Prefecture, Japan, and graduated from Matsumoto Girls' School in Nagano Prefecture, Japan. In 1956, she moved to New York City, USA, and began to demonstrate her leading avant-garde artistic creation. She currently lives in Tokyo, Japan.

She has had joint exhibitions with outstanding contemporary artists such as Andy Warhol, Claes Oldenburg, and Jasper Johns.

Yayoi Kusama - This name sounds quite classical and elegant, but anyone who sees her works will get a completely different feeling. Endless dots and stripes, and gorgeous flowers overlap to form an ocean, confusing the existence of real space, leaving only waves of dizziness and confusion of not knowing where you are.

For Yayoi Kusama, the repetitive dots are more of a form of therapy than a way for her to communicate with the world. Kusama was born in Japan in 1929 as a lonely child. At an early age, she was interested in the dots in real life. Mirrors, polka dots, biological tentacles and tips are all recurring motifs in Kusama's later works. Her fascination with spots stems from neurological audio-visual impairment that she suffered from at an early age. This disease made her see the world as if it were apart. Covered with a speckled web.

So she began to draw these spots, which resemble cells, races, molecules, the most basic elements of life. Kusama regarded them as signals from the universe and nature. "The earth is just one of millions of dots." She uses them to change the inherent sense of form, deliberately creating continuity between things, and creating an infinitely extending space in which the audience cannot be sure. The border between the real world and fantasy.