
YAYOI KUSAMA
A-PUMPKIN SKLO, 2013
Acrylic on canvas
130.3 x 162 cm (51.2 x 63.7 inches)
signed, titled, and dated ‘YAYOI KUSAMA 2013 A-PUMPKIN SKLO’ and titled in Japanese
(on the reverse)
Provenance
Ota Fine Arts, Singapore
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Christie’s Hong-Kong: 23 May 2021
HKD 50,650,000
Source: Christie’s
YAYOI KUSAMA (B. 1929) (christies.com)
On 10 April, 2021, as the Covid-19 pandemic continues its grip and hardly an obvious time to unveil a blockbuster exhibition, New York Botanical Garden opened ‘Cosmic Nature’ on its sprawling 250 acre grounds, dedicated to Yayoi Kusama’s lifelong preoccupation with the natural world. Despite limited visitor numbers due to social-distancing controls and travel restrictions, the exhibition quickly became one of the most talked-about cultural events of the year. Images of the show – such as “Dancing Pumpkin” (2020), an exuberant 5-meter-tall yellow octopus with black spots, and “Starry Pumpkin” (2015, pictured) a radiant golden and red gourd housed in a conservatory amidst flora and fauna – filled the media, both traditional and social. This outpour of excitement and admiration for the exhibition underscores the enduring appeal of Kusama, her delirious portrayal of hallucinatory experiences all the more relatable during these trying times.
YAYOI KUSAMA, Dancing Pumpkin, New-York Botanical Garden
Yayoi Kusama was born in 1929 in Matsumoto City, Nagano Prefecture, Japan. She grew up in a family that made its living from harvesting seeds and has been captivated by the pumpkin from a young age. In her autobiography, she writes: “What appealed to me most was the pumpkin’s generous unpretentiousness. That and its solid spiritual balance.” In 1958, at the age of 29, she moved alone to New York, and immersed herself in the city’s post-war cultural scene, quickly establishing a reputation for her controversial performances and Infinity Nets, paintings of dense interlocking loops with no beginning and no end. By the early 1970s, Kusama returned to Japan, and went through an intense period of depression, retreating to a specialist medical facility. It was during this period that she found solace and comfort in painting pumpkins, creating endless colorful iterations of the spotted fruit. Today, the pumpkin has achieved an almost mythical status in Kusama’s oeuvre and stands – in many ways – as the artist’s alter ego.

Painted in 2013, A-PUMPKIN SKLO, is a dazzling example of Kusama’s mature pumpkin painting. The work pulsates with the intensity of the artist’s focus as she paints dot after dot in precisely controlled rows. Despite using only two colors – yellow and black, she produces an illusion of depth and shadow by placing larger dots on the ridges and smaller dots on the creases. The pattern repeats and repeats, echoing the artist’s use of mirrors in her installations, as well as her lifelong obsession with patterns and repetitions. The pumpkin is situated on a web of tasseled yellow nets on a black background, evoking overlapping waves or fields of leaves, a stylized take on the artist’s iconic Infinity Nets. Blurring the boundaries between representation and abstraction, A-PUMPKIN SKLO allows viewers to peek into Kusama’s unique and complex mindscape.