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Yayoi Kusama – Purple Pumpkin, 2011 – Official Silkscreen Edition Authorized by Mori Art Museum by Yayoi Kusama

Yayoi Kusama – Purple Pumpkin, 2011 – Official Silkscreen Edition Authorized by Mori Art Museum by Yayoi Kusama

Lynart Store

Screenprint

2011

Edition Size: 200

Sheet Size: 36 x 26.5 cm cm

Unsigned

Condition: Pristine

Details — Click to read

Purple Pumpkin, 2011

Yayoi Kusama

Lithographie

Typographié au verso

36 x 26.5 cm

Edition de 200

Publié avec l’aimable autorisation du Mori Art Museum, Tokyo

Livré depuis la FRANCE

Livraison GRATUITE dans le monde

Description :Œuvre emblématique de Yayoi Kusama, Purple Pumpkin (2011) illustre à merveille l’univers visuel hypnotique et reconnaissable de l’artiste japonaise parmi les plus influentes de l’art contemporain. Cette lithographie met en scène une citrouille stylisée, motif central et obsessionnel dans l’œuvre de Kusama, ornée de points concentriques violets sur un fond graphique structuré, rappelant les réseaux organiques ou les cellules végétales, si chers à son imaginaire.

Reproduite avec une typographie au verso, cette œuvre est éditée avec l’accord officiel du Mori Art Museum de Tokyo, garantissant son authenticité et sa provenance. Purple Pumpkin capture toute l’intensité de la répétition obsessionnelle et la rigueur formelle qui caractérisent la démarche artistique de Kusama, entre minimalisme psychédélique et art pop japonais.

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€1,200.00

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The Artist

Yayoi Kusama

Avant-garde Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama works in many different mediums, including sculpture, painting, performance, books, poems and installation. Her impact can be seen in a wide range of creative movements, including minimalism, pop art, feminist and environment art, and she is viewed as one of Japan’s most influential living artists. Although she trained at the Kyoto Municipal School of Arts and Crafts in the traditional Japanese painting style of Nihonga in 1948, she quickly turned her back on these established artistic conventions and developed her own unique abstract, conceptual style. The major motif in her work is polka dots. Suffering hallucinations since she was a child, the polka dots are a representation of this experience and, for Kusama, the sign of infinity.

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