As its title indicates, this collage is another form of accumulation, in this case, of cut and assembled gelatin silver photographs of various of Kusama’s Infinity Nets paintings. Here she uses images of her completed paintings to create a composition meant to evoke the infinite. “My desire was to predict and measure the infinity of the unbounded universe…” she has said about her Infinity Nets series. “How deep was the mystery? Did infinite infinities exist beyond our universe?” But while Kusama expressed such boundlessness in allover paintings whose compositions were deliberately unstructured, in Accumulation of Nets (No. 7), she organized the photographs into a grid. This fixed geometric arrangement introduces tension into the work, since the rigid order and delineations of the grid contradict the loose indeterminacy of the artist’s countless painted gestures.

Additional text from

In The Studio: Postwar Abstract Painting online course, Coursera, 2017

Gallery label from 2006.

Yayoi Kusama works in a broad range of mediums, from painting and photography to installation and performance art. The possibility of infinite repetition suggested by the intricate netlike pattern visible in this work is one of the artist's signature motifs. The piece was made while Kusama was working in New York City from 1958 to 1968, before returning to her native Japan. She photographed her paintings, then cut up the black–and–white prints and fit them into a grid.

Medium Collage of gelatin silver prints
Dimensions 29 × 24 1/2" (73.7 × 62.2 cm)
Credit Gift of Agnes Gund
Object number 286.1996
Department Photography

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Yayoi Kusama

Yayoi Kusama

Japanese, born 1929 112 works online

A vital part of New York’s avant-garde art scene from the late 1950s to the early 1970s, Yayoi Kusama developed a distinctive style utilizing approaches associated with Abstract Expressionism, Minimalism, Pop art, Feminist art, and Institutional Critique—but she always defined herself in her own terms.

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