The Woman
Primary
Yayoi Kusama
(Matsumoto City, Nagano Prefecture, Japan, 1929–Tokyo, Japan, present)
NationalityJapanese, Asia
Date1953
MediumPastel, aqueous tempera, and acrylic paint
DimensionsSheet: 17 7/8 × 15 1/16 in. (45.4 × 38.2 cm)
Credit LineBlanton Museum of Art, The University of Texas at Austin, Gift of the Center for International Contemporary Arts; Emanuel and Charlotte Levine Collection, 1992.277
Keywords
Rights Statement
Collection AreaModern and Contemporary Art
Object number1992.277
On View
Not on viewCollection Highlight
In the 1950s, Yayoi Kusama began to distance herself from the traditional Japanese watercolor techniques that she learned as a girl and explore abstraction via biomorphic forms. In The Woman, Kusama depicts an amoeba-like organism floating in an endless black abyss. Its title encourages us to read the form as an abstract rendering of female genitalia, with its spikes suggesting anxiety or other fraught psychological conditions around sex, themes Kusama would explore further ten years later, covering a chair in a multitude of phallic forms. The work’s dots and seemingly infinite background also prefigure later works such as Kusama’s abstract Infinity Net paintings and Infinity Mirror rooms, which explore the feeling of smallness generated by vast expanses of space.
Exhibitions