SoWAs

Art News

Kyoto City KYOCERA Museum of Art Higashiyama Cube

2025.5.12

[草間彌生 版画の世界―反復と増殖―]

【venue】

Kyoto City KYOCERA Museum of Art Higashiyama Cube


【Period】

April 25 (Fri.) -September 7 (Sun.), 2025


*This exhibition has two installations.

Part I : April 25 (Fri.) - June 29 (Sun.), 2025/Part II: July 1 (Tue.) - September 7 (Sun.), 2025

*All artworks will be changed between the two installations.


【Time】

10:00~18:00(last admission 17:30)


【Closed on】

Mondays, except April 28, May 5, July 21, August 11


【Admission】

Adult ¥2,200 (Advance/Group ¥2,000)

High school and University student ¥1,400 (Advance/Group ¥1,200)

Elementary and Junior high school student ¥600 (Advance/Group ¥500)


*Preschool children are free, but must be accompanied by an adult guardian

*Tax included

*Free admission for persons with disability certificate and one attendant (please bring your disability certificate or other proof of identification)


【About the Exhibition】

This exhibition introduces the world of prints by world-renowned avant-garde artist Yayoi Kusama (1929-).

 Yayoi Kusama made her international debut at the 45th Venice Biennale in 1993 as a representative Japanese artist, but her active involvement in printmaking from an earlier stage of her career was a major driving force behind her current acclaim.

 In 1979, Yayoi Kusama exhibited her first prints. In contrast to her other works based on themes such as death and suffering after returning from the U.S., her prints are rich in color with vivid motifs. In addition to abstract expressions of her earlier works, motifs such as pumpkins, dresses, grapes, flowers, and butterflies covered in distinct colors and composed of mesh and polka dots are distinctive in her printworks. It is no exaggeration to say that Kusama, whose creative activities are rooted in the proliferation of dots and nets, inevitably encountered printmaking, an art of reproduction.

 In recent years, Kusama has produced a series of distinctive works, including the “Mt Fuji” series, using the ukiyo-e woodblock print technique, and a series of large black-and-white silkscreen prints entitled “Love Forever.”

 This exhibition will showcase the wonder of Yayoi Kusama’s print art. Approximately 330 works will be selected from the artist’s collection and works owned by the Matsumoto City Museum of Art in Nagano Prefecture, her home-town, that holds one of the world’s largest collections of Kusama printworks.