Yayoi Kusama’s pumpkins and Infinity Net works represent two of the most iconic and conceptually rigorous strands of her practice. Emerging from her lifelong exploration of repetition and self-obliteration, these bodies of work translate personal psychology into a universal visual language. Whether rendered in sculpture, painting, or print, Kusama’s motifs operate through accumulation—each dot or looping mark contributing to a larger, immersive field that gestures toward infinity.
The pumpkin, first introduced in her early career, functions as both autobiographical symbol and cultural icon. Its rounded form, typically saturated in brilliant yellow and punctuated with black polka dots, balances whimsy with formal precision. Through repetition of surface pattern, the pumpkin becomes destabilized—less an object than a rhythmic constellation of marks—transforming an organic subject into a timeless emblem of resilience, warmth, and quiet humor.
By contrast, the Infinity Net paintings are meditative and expansive. Built from painstakingly hand-painted arcs that stretch across monochromatic canvases, the nets eliminate hierarchy and focal point, enveloping the viewer in a boundless spatial experience. While visually distinct, both the pumpkins and the nets are rooted in the same conceptual foundation: the multiplication of a single gesture until it transcends individuality, dissolving the self into an infinite continuum.