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Yayoi Kusama - by Midori Yamamura (Paperback)

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Highlights

  • An examination of Yayoi Kusama's work that goes beyond the usual biographical interpretation to consider her place in postwar global art history.
  • About the Author: Midori Yamamura is a Lecturer in Art History at Fordham University.
  • 256 Pages
  • Art, Individual Artists

Description



About the Book



An examination of Yayoi Kusama's work that goes beyond the usual biographical interpretation to consider her place in postwar global art history.



Book Synopsis



An examination of Yayoi Kusama's work that goes beyond the usual biographical interpretation to consider her place in postwar global art history.

Yayoi Kusama is the most famous artist to emerge from Japan in the period following World War II. Part of a burgeoning international art scene in the early 1960s, she exhibited in New York with Andy Warhol, Donald Judd, Claes Oldenburg, and other Pop and Minimalist luminaries, and in Europe with the Dutch Nul and the German Zero artist groups. Known for repetitive patterns, sewn soft sculptures, naked performance, and suggestive content, Kusama's work anticipated the politically charged feminist art of the 1970s. But Kusama and her work were soon eclipsed by a dealer-controlled art market monopoly of white male American artists. Returning to Japan in 1973, Kusama became almost as famous for her self-proclaimed mental illness and permanent residence in a psychiatric hospital as she was for her art. In this book, Midori Yamamura eschews the usual critical fascination with Kusama's biography to consider the artist in her social and cultural milieu. By examining Kusama's art alongside that of her peers, Yamamura offers a new perspective on Kusama's career.

Yamamura shows that Kusama, who came of age in totalitarian wartime Japan, embraced art as an anticonformist pursuit, seeking a subjective autonomy that resulted in the singular expression of her art. Examining Kusama's association with European and New York art movements of the 1960s and her creation of psychedelic light-and-sound "Happenings," Yamamura argues that Kusama and her heterogeneous peers defied and undermined various pillars of modernity during the crucial transition from the modern nation-state to global free-market capitalism.

The art market rediscovered Kusama in the 1990s, and she has since had a series of high-profile exhibitions. Recounting Kusama's story, Yamamura offers an incisive, penetrating analysis of postwar art's globalization as viewed from the periphery.



Review Quotes




The strength of this book however lies in its elucidation of the broader artistic context and social politics of Kusama's work, revealing heretofore understudied aspects of art in the international arena since 1945. Yamamura has produced perhaps the most significant scholarship on Kusama to date, making Yayoi Kusama: Inventing the Singular required reading for any study of the artist.--Asian Diasporic Visual Cultures and the Americas--



About the Author



Midori Yamamura is a Lecturer in Art History at Fordham University.

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