Sharing the Infinite World of Yayoi Kusama

The exterior of the Hirshhorn Museum during “Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors”

That’s the exterior of the Hirshhorn Museum, all polka-dotted up for the current exhibit “Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors,” as seen during my recent visit.

Once inside, you’re not allowed to take any pictures of the artwork.

Just kidding

That’s a joke, of course. Taking photos is the entire point of the exhibit, like it or not.

Animated gif of Infinity Mirrored Room—The Souls of Millions of Light Years Away by Yayoi Kusama

Animated gif view of Dots Obsession—Love Transformed into Dots by Yayoi Kusama

(Above: views of Infinity Mirrored Room—The Souls of Millions of Light Years Away [2013] and Dots Obsession—Love Transformed into Dots [2007] by Yayoi Kusama.)

But before you can do that, you have to make it inside. Many articles have been written on this subject, with discouraging headlines like “How to Survive the Yayoi Kusama Show.” All I’ll add is that your best bet may be to opt for same-day tickets by getting in line by 9:00 am. The museum opens at 10:00, and then they hand out timed tickets on a first-come first-served basis.

Online tickets are worth a shot, but the odds are not good. (More about ticketing on the Hirshhorn’s website.)

A view of “Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors”
“Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors” installation view

What’s the big deal?

This is surely not the first article you’ve read about this exhibit. So what makes it so special?

Art-lovers are, in general, accustomed to a certain way of enjoying exhibits:

  • show up whenever you like
  • go by yourself or with a group
  • take your time

But a quick look around the second floor of the Hirshhorn confirms that you can throw those expectations out the window and get used to:

  • timed tickets
  • lines of people with their phones at the ready
  • guards-slash-bouncers armed with actual stopwatches to limit your time

This kind of phones-first exhibit was always going to upset some people — but is it any less valid as an art exhibit?

Wait, art?

Oh right, the art.

Yayoi Kusama's Obliteration Room
Views from the exhibit’s final portion, the Obliteration Room. Viewers receive six colored stickers to add to the white walls, props, and Ikea furniture.

Before she became famous in your Instagram feed, Yayoi Kusama was known as an artist who works in many different media and with a variety of reoccurring obsessions. This exhibit is a retrospective of her work, spanning seven decades and the museum’s entire second floor.

The first thing you’ll see in the exhibit is a video introduction from Kusama herself:

The second thing you’ll see is her early drawing. This is also a first glimpse at one of those obsessions I mentioned: dots.

Ink drawing on paper by Yayoi Kusama

Things quickly progress from there, with the next two rooms introducing Kusama’s soft sculptures, phallus motif, and repetitive Infinity Nets paintings.

Foreground: A Snake, sewn and stuffed fabric with silver paint, by Yayoi Kusama. 1974.
Infinity Nets Yellow, oil on canvas, by Yayoi Kusama. 1960.

Soon you’ll see the first lines for the main event: one of six mirrored rooms from the exhibit’s title. Created as immersive environments ripe for “self-obliteration,” they are a little less Zen in this incarnation. (More on that below.)

In addition to the artwork itself, there’s a remarkable story to the 87-year-old artist, who — in the face of mental illness and a male-centric, Western-focused art world —  has enjoyed commercial and critical success and is among the most popular living artists. You can learn more about her life in this video interview, this blog post, or by reading her autobiography, Infinity Net.

So back to my question: is a popular, Instagram-bait retrospective any less valid as an art exhibit?

No

To elaborate on that answer: it’s different, for sure. But not worse.

This is an exhibit that is literally impossible to enjoy in solitude. It’s not allowed: If you go alone, you’ll be paired up with a stranger to be admitted to the mirrored rooms. You’ll find no peace and quiet, and — despite the mirrors — no time for reflection. In each special room, your time is limited to 20–30 seconds.

(You’re free to take your time for the rest of the exhibit, which is also fun:)

Yayoi Kusama animated gif
Installation view of “Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors”

Everything points to “Infinity Mirrors” as an alternative way of experiencing an art exhibit, one where the experience must be shared, not solitary. In fact, you get to share it twice: once with the people there, and once with your online followers. (Hi!)

It has much in common with the performing arts, or Disneyland for that matter, while being more accessible than either. Tickets are still free, even if they’re hard to get. And people with restricted mobility can see the exhibit via virtual reality.

gif by Joanna Wohlmuth

Infinite room

It’s true that waiting in lines and being rushed isn’t going to become my preferred kind of art outing. But this exhibit means that Kusama can still treat me to an art happening, decades after the sixties.

What this exhibit doesn’t mean:

  • Timed tickets and selfie-centric exhibits are the new norm
  • You can’t still find emptier, quieter museums around town
  • All of art is cheapened when new populations discover exhibits that excite them

In short, arts-lovers should be welcoming these crowds, especially in a time when museums are striving to increase attendance and (hopefully) reach out to underserved communities they’ve historically written off. “Infinity Mirrors” is an exhibit that, despite the lines, does its best to make room for everyone.

–George Miller

“Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors” is on view at the Hirshhorn Museum through May 14, 2017 and is traveling to other locations afterward.

Artist Opportunities #363

Painting by Art League instructor Joey Mánlapaz.

On Tuesdays, we gather a variety of artist opportunities around the DC area and beyond. Find one below and enter today — good luck! Click here for recent opportunities posts, and submit your opportunity listing here.

Artful Fashion

Deadline: April 1. The Allegany Arts Council is pleased to announce a call for entry for its exhibition “Artful Fashion.” This show, presented through the month of May 2017 in the lovely Saville Gallery of Cumberland, Maryland, features artistically designed, functional, and handcrafted clothing, jewelry and accessories.

Floyd, VA

Deadline: April 25. Floyd Center for the Arts, located in beautiful, rural Floyd, VA, invites visual media artists within 150 miles of Floyd to submit artwork for exhibition in the New River Art Biennial 2017.

Printmaking

Deadline: April 29. “Spectrum” at Cade Art Gallery (Arnold, MD) seeks hand-pulled prints and book arts that explore traditional or innovative approaches to color in printmaking.

Young artists with disabilities

Deadline: May 3. “Electrify!” is a juried competition and exhibition featuring artwork by artists with disabilities, ages 16–25, showcasing artwork that excites our senses, awakens our curiosity, and electrifies our very being.

Glow

Deadline: July 21. Art selected for “Glow” at the Athenaeum (Alexandria, VA) will convey a sense of lightness or hope emanating from something dark.  Entries may be literal, figural, allegorical, or abstract. Artists who live or work in Washington, DC, Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia may enter.


Re-runs: These announcements have been posted here before, but it’s not too late to enter!

Current and recent students

Deadline: March 22. Wet Paint at the Workhouse Arts Center (Lorton, VA) is open to any artist who graduated with a Bachelor or Masters degree in 2014, 2015 or 2016, or any current student artist in a Bachelor or Masters program.

Glitch

Deadline: March 26. Target Gallery (Alexandria, VA) invites national and international artists to apply for Glitch, an exhibition that explores new technological and interactive mediums in art. This exhibition will examine the intersection of contemporary and digital art; highlighting emerging new media in art such as digital, website, glitch / gif, and video art.

Illinois art festival

Deadline: March 30. The West End Arts Festival in La Grange, IL is a juried fine art festival taking place September 9–10, 2017.

Solo show proposals

Deadline: March 31. VisArts (Rockville, MD) invites artists working in all media to apply for 2018 Solo Exhibitions in the Gibbs Street Gallery and Common Ground Gallery.

Public Art in Falls Church

Deadline: March 31. The Arts Council of Fairfax County is accepting proposals from artists or artist teams for a temporary public art engagement project in Falls Church, VA.  The selected artist/team will design, fabricate, and install a temporary work. The $15,000 artist fee includes design, materials, fabrication, insurance, travel, packing, shipping, installation, de-installation, display and maintenance.

Colored pencil works

Deadline: March 31. The Colored Pencil Society of America International Exhibition is exclusively for works done in 100% colored pencil. This year’s exhibition is in North Bethesda, MD.

Artful Living

Deadline: March 31. In association with Fairfax Spotlight on the Arts, Britepaths (formerly Our Daily Bread) presents “Artful Living,” a juried art exhibition and community event. Proceeds from event benefit our families and the Fairfax Spotlight on the Arts Festival Scholarships Fund.

Philadelphia craft show

Deadline: April 1. The 41st Annual Philadelphia Museum of Art Craft Show, a juried exhibition and retail sale, will be held at the Pennsylvania Convention Center from November 9 to 12, 2017, with a Preview Party on November 8. The jury will accept 195 craft artists.

Performance art

Deadline: April 1. The Franklin Furnace Fund awards grants annually to emerging artists to enable them to produce major performance art works in New York.

Art on Vacation

Deadline: April 3. For “Escape: Art on Vacation” at Annmarie Sculpture Garden & Arts Center (Solomons, MD), artists should submit artwork that embodies the spirit of adventure, the love of travel, and the artistic inspiration found abroad. All media welcome; small to large-scale installations; new media encouraged; indoor and outdoor works accepted; cash awards.

Trawick Prize

Deadline: April 7. The 15th Annual Trawick Prize: Bethesda Contemporary Art Awards will award $14,000 in prize monies to selected artists and features the work of the finalists in a group exhibition. Applicants must be 18 years of age or older and permanent, full-time residents of Maryland, Virginia or Washington, DC. All original 2-D and 3-D fine art including painting, drawing, photography, sculpture, fiber art, digital, mixed media and video will be accepted.

Art @ the Park

Deadline: April 8. Art @ the Park is a regional festival (Mid-Atlantic Region) located in Annapolis MD in the magnificent setting of Quiet Waters Park. It features original art work from exhibitors throughout the region and includes musical performances, children’s activities, eclectic food, wine and beer.

Baltimore juried exhibit

Deadline: April 10. School 33 Art Center (Baltimore, MD) is now accepting applications from artists for the 2017 Juried Group Exhibitions. Applications are open to visual artists working in any medium who wish to have their most recent works considered.

Small prints

Deadline: April 10. Artists from all 50 states and Canada are eligible to submit up to 3 original prints for the National Small Prints Show at Creede Arts Council (CO).

Strictly Painting

Deadline: April 14. McLean (VA) Project for the Arts invites all Mid-Atlantic artists to submit up to 4 jpegs of paintings or works related in some way to painting for consideration in Strictly Painting 11.

Freedom juried show

Deadline: April 16. Project:Free is a call to artists to explore what it means to live in a free world or to have freedom of speech and expression. Organized by SIPMA Contemporary, the venue is the Printmaking Center of NJ. There are no limitations on size or media as long as it fits through an 84” door.

Dining ware and art

Deadline: April 21. Front of the House: Dining Together in Objects and Images at the Guilford (CT) Art Center will present serving ware and art created by American artists that are fit for the table, or represent gathering to share a meal. The exhibit is open to works from the purely functional to the fanciful and even conceptual, and can include two-dimensional works.

DC-area artists

April 21. The City of Rockville, MD announces its Call For Entries 2018 at Glenview Mansion Art Gallery. Open to all artists in the greater DC metropolitan area (MD, VA, WV, DC).

Bethany Beach

Deadline: April 28. The 39th Annual Bethany Beach (DE) Arts Festival will take place on Saturday, September 9. The one-day show will feature more than 100 artists.

Watercolor juried exhibit

Deadline: May 6. The Central Virginia Watercolor Guild invites entries to the 2017 Annual Exhibition, to be held at McGuffey Art Center in Charlottesville, VA. The juror this year is Steve Fleming, former instructor at The Art League.

MD craft show

Deadline: May 7. The Academy Art Museum Craft Show (Easton, MD) is an indoor, juried craft show featuring approximately 65 artists from across the United States.

Wearable art

Deadline: May 15. The ManneqART Competition (Laurel, MD) covers three distinct “sections” of wearable art design: Sculpture, Hair, and Makeup. An artist’s award pool of over $10,000 USD has been allocated for this year’s ManneqART competition.

Panama residency

Deadline: May 29. Continuing our year-long focus on Black Speculative Art, the Creative Currents Artist Collaborative Summer Artist Residency allows literary, visual, performance, dance and music artists two weeks in conversation with their creative muse and each other as we explore the Black Speculative Arts amongst the backdrop of historic Portobelo, Panama.

Matador Review

Deadline: May 31. The Matador Review, an online literature and art quarterly based in Chicago, publishes poetry, fiction, flash fiction, creative non-fiction, and visual art. Art submissions for the Summer 2017 issue are now being accepted.

Small works: prints

Deadline: June 3. For the 20th Annual Washington Printmakers’ National Small Works Competition and Exhibition, eligible entries are hand-pulled prints, screen prints, digital prints, photographs, and three-dimensional work with print components.

Athenaeum

Deadline: July 21. The Athenaeum Invitational celebrates the visual arts of Virginia, Maryland, and the District of Columbia. It is a theme-based event featuring the works of both specially-invited artists who have exhibited in the Athenaeum Gallery in the past, as well as works selected through an open call for submissions.

FEAST proposals

Deadline: August 1. F.E.A.S.T. at VisArts 2017 (Rockville, MD) calls for proposals that help envision and frame the future. What voices, stories, platforms, food, services, or experiences are currently missing or hidden?

National Parks residencies

Deadline: various. The National Parks Arts Foundation invites applications to residencies and proposals for workshops.