Auction: 13 days
As of May 28, 2026
KUSAMA, YAYOI
1929 Matsumoto/Nagano
Title: Birds.
Date: 1980.
Technique: India ink, gouache, pastel and collage on Paper.
Measurement: 51 x 66 cm.
Notation: Dated and signed lower right: 1980 Yayoi Kusama. Titled (Japanese character), signed and dated verso centre: 1980 Yayoi Kusama.
Frame: Framed. Not examined out of the frame.
A registration card dated 4.2.2019, issued by the Yayoi Kusama Studio, is available for this work. The work is registered there under number 3586.
Provenance:
- - Phillips, London, auction 8 March 2019, lot 105
- Private collection, Israel
- A striking testament to the reinvention of Kusama’s visual language
- An intimate and intense body of work that brings together the defining characteristics of her oeuvre
- A multidimensional body of work that navigates the boundaries between self-dissolution and the limits of human experience
- "Birds" represents the foundation of her later international fame
- To mark its 50th anniversary, the Museum Ludwig in Cologne is dedicating a major solo exhibition to the artist
Yayoi Kusama: Between Extreme Experiences and Artistic Radicalism
Yayoi Kusama is among the most influential artists of contemporary international art. Born in 1929 in Matsumoto, Japan, into a wealthy family, her childhood was marked by her parents’ troubled marriage, a difficult relationship with her strict mother, and early psychological experiences such as hallucinations and obsessive fears. At a young age, Kusama already developed the characteristic visual worlds of dots, nets, and repetitive structures that continue to define her work to this day.
In the late 1950s, Kusama moved to the United States, where she gained considerable attention through radical happenings, installations, and her iconic Polka Dots. Her multifaceted practice spans painting, sculpture, installation, and performance, revolving around themes of infinity, self-dissolution, and perception. Positioned between Pop Art, Minimalism, and Conceptual Art—without ever fully belonging to any one movement—Kusama became a decisive figure in postwar art. Following her return to Japan in the 1970s and a period of personal crisis, her international standing consolidated sustainably from the early 1980s onward.
Transition, Consolidation, and a New Focus in the Arts
The work Birds was created seven years after Kusama’s return from the United States to her homeland. Against a luminous orange background, an organically bounded form emerges, framed by a dense, net-like pattern and a softly fading dark contour. At the center are collaged depictions of birds, appearing like fragile islands within this pulsating structure. Small, dot-like accents rhythmically punctuate the composition, referring to Kusama’s central motif of the Polka Dots. The combination of drawing, painting, and collage generates a multilayered and tension-filled pictorial structure.
Within Kusama’s oeuvre, the work stands as a representative example of the intimate works on paper in which personal experiences are directly reflected. At the same time, it marks a transitional moment in which Kusama, emerging from crisis, rediscovers artistic concentration and begins the path toward later international recognition.
Between Freedom and Entanglement: Fragility and Self-Dissolution in Birds
On a thematic level, Birds may also be understood as a poetic reflection on fragility, freedom, and confinement. Birds, traditionally perceived as symbols of lightness and movement, appear here at once isolated and embedded within an almost overpowering visual network. This tension points to Kusama’s recurring themes of self-dissolution and psychological extremity: the individual emerges as part of a larger, expanding system in which orientation and autonomy remain precarious.
The dense network structure spanning the pictorial space is closely linked to Kusama’s so-called Infinity Nets, a motif she has pursued since the late 1950s. In Birds, however, this motif is translated into a more intimate, almost contemplative visual language. The handmade, at times fragile execution on paper heightens the sense of vulnerability and immediacy. At the same time, the intense coloration creates an energetic charge, causing the image to oscillate between threat and vitality.
The work thus condenses key aspects of Kusama’s artistic practice into concentrated form: obsessive repetition, the interplay between figuration and abstraction, and the translation of inner psychological states into visual rhythms. Birds may therefore be understood as a quiet yet compelling testimony to the period in which Kusama reorganized her visual language while simultaneously laying the foundations for the internationally celebrated body of work that would follow.
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#Yayoi Kusama #Copenhagen School #Pop Art #Asian Art #Japan #Post-War Art #1980s #Post War.
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