Yayoi Kusama’s body of work draws on highly personal themes and dark inspirations, yet her recurring motifs—polka dots, flowers, pumpkins—are highly accessible, attracting children and families. While early rejection took its toll on Kusama’s mental health, she is now one of the world’s top-selling contemporary artists.
Yayoi Kusama was born in Matsumoto, Japan in 1929. Aged 10, she hallucinated that violets in a field were speaking to her—terrified, Kusama turned to drawing as a means of calm. However, her parents were unsupportive of her aims to forge a career in art, preferring that she married and had children. She studied at the Kyoto Municipal School of Arts and Crafts between 1948–1949 but did not envisage a career in Japan, so moved to New York City in 1957.
Kusama’s practice spans painting, drawing, printmaking, installation, film and more, exploring the idea of how treating art as an immersive experience breaks down boundaries between inner and outer worlds, exploring the idea of existence.
Yes, during the mid-1950s, Kusama wrote to Georgia O’Keeffe, an artist she admired for advice about becoming an artist in New York City. While O’Keeffe explained that making a living as an artist in the US wasn’t easy, she advised Kusama to come to the States and show her work. It was forbidden to send money from Japan to the USA in 1957, but Kusama sewed dollar bills into her kimono and headed for New York.
In New York City in the late 1950s and early 1960s, the art scene (including Pop Art) was incredibly male-dominated. Although Donald Judd and Frank Stella admired her work, other artists gained recognition for ideas inspired by Kusama’s pieces, while she did not. For example, in Accumulation II (1962), Kusama covered a couch with fabric phallic projections she painted with plaster. Claes Oldenburg was inspired by the couch and became famous for soft sculpture. Her 1963 installation Aggregation: One Thousand Boats Show featured wallpaper containing a repeated pattern of her exhibit—Andy Warhol’s cow wallpaper debuted in 1966. In 1965, Kusama’s mirrored-room environment, Phalli’s First was a world’s first in 1965. Only a few months later, Lucas Samaras exhibited a mirrored installation at a more prestigious gallery. Kusama threw herself from the window of her flat.
Kusama has painted and sculpted pumpkins, a demonstration of a love that began with a childhood fascination for the plant (she won a prize for a Nihonga painting of pumpkins). 2009’s Imagined Scenery Dotted With Pumpkins acrylic painting sees bright green-and-red forms popping from a pink-and-blue background. Yellow Pumpkin a two-metre sculpture in Naoshima, was rebuilt following typhoon damage in 2021. Pumpkin, her tallest pumpkin to date, was a six-metre-high bronze that stood in London’s Kensington Gardens in 2024.
Yes, the Yayoi Kusama Museum opened in Tokyo in 2017. One floor is dedicated to an infinity-rooom installation called Pumpkins Screaming About Love Beyond Infinity.
Ocula


A respected voice in contemporary art discourse.
Focusing on ambitious storytelling and insightful art-world commentary. Ocula Magazine publishes in-depth interviews, critical essays and timely analysis on the artists, exhibitions and ideas driving the global art world.
Learn more about Ocula Magazine
Showcasing the best of the art world.
Ocula partners with galleries from around the world to highlight their artists, artworks and exhibitions. Gallery membership is by application and invitation, with each member vetted by an independent panel.
Learn more about Ocula Membership
Specialises in the sale of major artworks.
Led by a team with deep ties to the world’s leading auction houses, galleries and collectors. Ocula’s advisory team offers bespoke services to high-net-worth clients from around the world who are looking to acquire the best of contemporary and modern art.
Learn more about our team and services