
YAYOI KUSAMA (B. 1929)
INFINITY-NETS (OOAXT), 2008
Acrylic on canvas
130.3 x 130.3 cm (51 1/4 x 51 1/4 inches)
Signed twice, titled and dated ‘OOAXT INFINITY-NETS YAYOI KUSAMA Yayoi Kusama 2008’
(on the reverse)
Provenance
Ota Fine Arts, Tokyo
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Private Collection, Sydney
Anon. sale, Christie’s Shanghai, 24 October 2014, lot 229
Acquired at the above sale by the present owner
Auction History
Christie’s London: 28 June 2023
Estimated: GBP 1,500,000 – 2,000,000
GBP 1,734,000 / USD 2,190,775
YAYOI KUSAMA (B. 1929) (christies.com)
REPEAT SALE
Christie’s Shanghai: 23 October 2014
Estimated: CNY 3,000,000 – 4,300,000
CNY 3,870,000 / USD 632,630
Yayoi Kusama (b. 1929) (christies.com)
With its scintillating web of dots undulating across a shimmering expanse of red, the present work is a majestic example of Yayoi Kusama’s Infinity Nets. Wrought from delicate, scalloped strands of impasto, these works stands among the defining achievements of the artist’s oeuvre, each a hymn to the unfathomable void of human existence. Here, skeins of red paint are woven across a blue backdrop, creating an amorphous cloud of color and texture that fades from deep crimson to pink and purple. Tiny azure dots gleam through the surface, like microscopic patches of sky. Commenced during her early years in New York during the late 1950s, Kusama’s Infinity Nets offered unique responses to many of the same questions posed by Abstract Expressionism and Minimalism. At the same time, these works were deeply personal, functioning as an outlet for the obsessive visions of dots and webs that had plagued Kusama since childhood. Her first hallucination, notably, was dominated by the color red: here, almost seven decades later, it continues to haunt her world.

Kusama was born in Japan in 1929. During a childhood full of emotional turmoil, she found solace in art. At the age of ten, she began experiencing visions: vast fields of dots and flashes of light that would multiply before her eyes, covering herself and her surroundings.
“My room, my body, the entire universe was filled with [patterns], my self was eliminated, and I had returned and been reduced to the infinity of eternal time and the absolute of space. This was not an illusion but reality.”
The Infinity Nets, ultimately, had their origins here. During her time in New York, Kusama began to immerse herself in these paintings. Despite their success in both America and Europe—Donald Judd, Lucy Lippard and Frank Stella were early admirers—the artist continued to battle personal demons during these years. The meditative act of hand-painting these webs of color, often for hours on end without eating or sleeping, brought her great comfort.

By the time Kusama moved to New York in 1957, the concept of infinity was beginning to spark the imagination of many artists. In the aftermath of the Second World War, figures such as Barnett Newman and Mark Rothko had reconceived painting as a means of transcending the material world. In France, Yves Klein would attempt his seminal ‘leap into the void’; later, in Poland, the artist Roman Opałka would set out on a lifelong quest to paint the numbers one to infinity. Klein and Rothko, along with artists such as Lucio Fontana and Piero Manzoni, were among Kusama’s early exhibition partners. Others would place her Infinity Nets in the context of Minimalism, their serial, repetitive forms stripped of all external reference. Elsewhere, they prompted comparison with the dizzying illusions of Op Art. The present work, with its richly marbled chromatic surface, might even be seen to chime with the opulent abstract canvases of Gerhard Richter, which similarly captured a sense of interminable depth.