
YAYOI KUSAMA
Pumpkin, 1991
Acrylic on canvas
61 x 72.8 cm (24 x 28.6 inches)
Signed in English, titled in Japanese and dated 1991 on the reverse
Provenance
Ota Fine Arts, Tokyo
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Sotheby’s Hong-Kong: 7 October 2019
HKD 12,175,000
Source: Sotheby’s
(#602) YAYOI KUSAMA | Pumpkin (sothebys.com)
Embodying an iconic, charismatic and highly personal motif, Kusama’s pumpkins are as universally emblematic of her oeuvre as the Campbell’s soup can was to Andy Warhol’s. Rendered in the classic palette of yellow and black, Kusama painted Pumpkin in the gourd’s essential color with a direct semblance to a sweet, tender and luscious kabocha. The work is covered in precisely painted polka dots and set against a wall of tessellated nets – all of which are wholly iconic and era-defining features of the artist’s style. Developed to mature perfection through decades of near-obsessive production and reproduction, each of these distinct elements of the piece reflect a different segment within Kusama’s expansive aesthetic philosophy whilst coming together to create a dazzlingly hypnotic visual narrative – one that evokes strong associations with the formal reduction of Minimalism, the repetitive symbolism of Pop and the hypnotic illusions of Op Art. Surreal and fantastical, Kusama’s pumpkin paintings exhibit extraordinary dexterity in skill and execution as well as the single-minded meticulous vision that defines the artist’s career – all the while being deeply personal and indexical, representing a wholly epic extension of Kusama’s legacy in contemporary art and culture.