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Yayoi Kusama Yayoi Kusama
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Author: Klaus Podoll 28. May 2004
Edited by: Klaus Podoll

Yayoi Kusama

Artist's website

Planet Pixel, Migraine, 2005. "More by Yayoi Kusama as experienced at the Matress Factory in Pittsburgh, PA. Fun stuff." (see here)

Yayoi Kusama's entoptic art

By Klaus Podoll, Frank Schneider, Takuji Hayashi

A new exhibition of the work of Japan's premiere artist, "Yayoi Kusama", appears at Zacheta National Gallery of Art in Warsaw, Poland, 6 April - 16 May 2004. The origin of Kusama's artistic universe of dots, nets and accumulating patterns has prompted many interpretations both from the artist herself, who celebrates her 75th birthday this year, and from fellow artists, art critics and art historians. In her essay "Entoptic phenomena in contemporary art, "which examines the impact of various types of visual phenomena arising from the central nervous system upon Paleolithic art, indigenous art all over the world, and contemporary art, Norwegian artist Jorunn Monrad wrote: "Yayoi Kusama, who has been defined as Japan's most influential artist, has painted clearly entoptic paintings since the fifties - depicting a unifying field of dots or nets - confirming their hallucinatory origin. Critics have variously ascribed her work to minimalism, feminism, obsessivism, surrealism, art brut, pop, and abstract expressionism. She herself rejects all categorizing. Her work has apparently not been associated with entoptics until now. That she has been associated with art brut may be attributable to her well-known mental condition; it is hard to imagine any other explanation, given the evident differences between her paintings and this genre. Regardless of her source of inspiration, Kusama's art is executed with lucidity, constancy and patience... Artists like Kusama are not concerned with how their works interact with the spectator; they merely recreate certain hallucinatory effects."

Yayoi Kusama, Untitled, pencil on paper, ca. 1939. © 2004 Yayoi Kusama.

In fact, Yayoi Kusama never made a secret of the fact that she considered her illness was the major driving force of her art. "It started from hallucination," was the first sentence of her 1975 autobiographical essay entitled The struggle and wanderings of my soul (SWS). However, there exists a great confusion among physicians and art critics in regards to the diagnosis of Kusama's illness and the origin of her hallucinations. Does she suffer from schizophrenia (see Solomon, 1997, Penn, 2006, and Risemberg, 2007), as first suspected by Japanese psychiatrist Shiho Nishimaru in a lecture during a 1952 congress of the Japanese Association for Neurology and Psychiatry? Or is she afflicted with obsessive compulsive disorder due to traumatic experiences in childhood, as seems to have been taken for granted by most art critics and apparently also by the artist herself? Although the artist has been treated ever since 1977 in a mental hospital in Tokyo, no communications have been published by her doctors (including authorities as Yoshihito Tokuda, Chairman of the Japanese Society for Psychopathology of Expression). It is no surprise that there have even been rumors that her "mental illness" is a fake publicity stunt.

I argued against a reading of her work as psychopathology

"It was in 1998 that, as I already mentioned, I first spoke about the artist Yayoi Kusama who lives voluntarily on the grounds of a psychiatric hospital in Japan. In that lecture I argued against a reading of her work as psychopathology, the consequence of mental illness."

(Vida JE, Drawn to the asylum: in search of missing parts (on the way to a possible conversation), 2002)

Yayoi Kusama, Accumulation of Corpses, 1950. © 2004 Yayoi Kusama.

More clarity can only be achieved by a careful analysis of the self-experienced phenomena which Kusama has described in a most precise and subtle way. The artist has recorded her visual symptoms which have recurred ever since her childhood: "I was often troubled by a thin silk-like greyish-coloured veil that came to envelope me. On the day this happened to me, people receded far away from me and looked small" (SWS). During these episodes, she experienced geometric hallucinations of nets and the visual illusion of teleopsia whereby objects appear further away, corresponding to her painting Accumulation of Corpses, 1950. She felt like being separated by a curtain from reality and people. She was informed by her doctors that she was suffering from depersonalization phenomena as symptom of obsessive compulsive disorder. However, a closer scrutiny of Kusama's descriptions of her visual symptoms, which can be found in many variations in her poems, novellas, and in her autobiographical novel Infinity Nets from 2002, suggests that the artist was haunted from her childhood by paroxysmal cerebral visual disturbances - i.e. entoptic phenomena, to use Jorunn Monrad's nomenclature, which can occur as visual aura symptoms of migraine.

A migraine sufferer's report

"If the aura pattern is an all-over quilt-pattern... then it is as if i were looking into two layers of vision -- the pattern layer and the 'real' layer, with the pattern sharp and in focus and 'reality' quite blurry, gray, and indistinct."

(Catherine Yronwode, Newsgroups: alt.support.headaches.migraine, April 17, 2000)

Yayoi Kusama and Infinity Net Painting, double exposure, early 1960s. © 2004 Yayoi Kusama.

Yayoi Kusama

"apparently, when you have bad migraines, kusama takes over your visual cortex"

(be movil, del.ico.us Links. Tag: Kusama, May 19, 2007)

This is also true for the recurring visual symptom which started in Kusamas's childhood and which motivated her installations (Drving Image, 1965/66) and performances (Kusama's Self-Obliteration, 1968), transcending the boundaries of the canvas. Commenting on her experiences as teenager, Kusama wrote: "One day I was looking at a red flower-patterned table-cloth on a table, and then when I looked up, I saw the ceiling, the window panes and the pillars completely covered with the same red flower patterns. With the whole room, my whole body and the whole universe covered entirely with the flower patterns, I would self-obliterate... and be reduced to nothingness" (SWS). This is a clear description of a type of visual perseveration in space first described by the British neurologist Macdonald Critchley in 1951, the so-called "illusory visual spread", which also affected Kusama's perception of her own body and thus created a feeling of "self-obliteration." This is celebrated in Kusama's art as the spiritual experience of the loss of individual identity by becoming one with the forms of the universe.

A migraine sufferer's report

"i am 15 years old and i see dots too. my whole world is made up of little dots. like a TC screen(its the mest way to describe it) they are very small about the size of a peace of sand. and all different colors. i think their red, blue, black, and white but im not sure. they are constently in motion so i cant focus on just one. they move like a sworm of ants or something. somethings the go into shapes or figures, mostly when my imagenations is running though. so when i ways little it would happen all the time. i can remember seeing snakes around my bed or a garilla in my door way. these things would make me scaried and still do. they look almost like a cartoon and solid, but when you touch them its like a ghost, you see it but your hand goes right through it. my mom told me that i have talked about it sence i have learned to talk. she send i would scream for her and when she came i would repeat 'The Dots Are Going To Get Me!!!' she thought i was going crazy. i year ago i when to DUKE to see if they knew what it was. the didnt beleive me and told me i was seeing the dots that you see when you look into the sky too long(i dont know sorry) my mom and me search the net all the time looking for other people like me. when i found one i cried and that was a few months ago. there was no way to contact them so we had to keep trying. if you or someone you know has what i have please email me at free_non_emohugs@yahoo.com

thank you,
Grace"

(Grace, American Foundation for the Blind - Message Boards - Eye Conditions - see dots, March 8, 2007)

Yayoi Kusama, Self-Obliteration by Dots (details), performance, documented with b/w photographs by Hal Reif, 1968. © 2004 Yayoi Kusama.

The diagnostical classification of Kusama's inspiring hallucinations as a symptom of mental illness has placed her work into the field of so-called "art brut" or "outsider art," despite the obvious phenomenal differences between her works and those produced by artists suffering from psychosis, as previously noted by Jorunn Monrad. The present re-assessment of Kusama's illness suggests that the artist neither suffers from schizophrenia nor from obsessive compulsive disorder, as has hitherto been assumed. According to the present findings, migraine aura experiences, anxiety, and depression may account for all known facts of her medical history as well as for the imagery of her artistic universe of dots, nets and accumulations. Thus Kusama's art may be labelled "outsider art" with no more and no less justification than the art of other great artists who used migraine experiences as a central source of inspiration: Lewis Carroll, Giorgio de Chirico, Sarah Raphael, to name just a few whose work has been reconsidered from a neuroesthetical perspective in recent years. Obviously, with her "outsider art," Yayoi Kusama is in good company. There are good reasons to believe that her work will belong to the enduring icons of 20th century art.

© 2004 NY Arts Magazine

References

Brehl J. „Entoptic Art“ – Entoptische Erscheinungen als Inspirationsquelle in der zeitgenössischen bildenden Kunst. Extrem News 29.1.2007.
Cohen D. Hallucinatory Souvenirs. The Ney York Sun, July 5, 2007
Penn A. Morbeck. Only Magazine, December 1, 2006.
Podoll K, Schneider F, Hayashi T. Yayoi Kusama's entoptic art. NY Arts Magazine 2004; 9 (no. 5/6):30-31.
Podoll K, Waniek S, Schneider F. Yayoi Kusama: Zaczelo sie halucynacja. [Yayoi Kusama: It started from hallucination. In Polish] Przew Lek 2004; 3: 106-108.
Risemberg R. Dancer in the Dark. Nijinsky the Visual Artist - Who Knew? The New York Blade, January 5, 2007.
Solomon A. Dot dot dot. (artist Yayoi Kusama). Artforum International, February 1, 1997.

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