A prototype of Pop art, Kusama's innovative and controversial first sculpture—a chair bedecked with canvas phalluses—carried her distinctive "infinity net" into the third dimension
When the Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama (born 1929) moved to New York in 1958, she had already developed her distinctive "infinity net" motif: a signature pattern of interlocking cellular forms painted on room-size canvases with the stated goal of covering "the entire world." With Accumulation No. 1 (1962), Kusama expanded this ambitious fantasy into three dimensions, creating the first in an ongoing series of presciently feminist sculptures composed of household furniture covered with stuffed and hand-sewn canvas phalluses and then painted. Accumulation No. 1 was shown at the Green Gallery in New York in late 1962, in what was widely considered the first group exhibition to focus on Pop art. In this focused publication, art historian Midori Yamamura examines the work within the larger context of Kusama's famed "infinity net" motif, which also encompasses the repeated polka-dot patterns that define her later work.
STATUS: Forthcoming | 10/28/2025
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FORMAT: Pbk, 7.25 x 9 in. / 48 pgs / 35 color. LIST PRICE: U.S. $14.95 LIST PRICE: CANADA $21 ISBN: 9781633451742 PUBLISHER: The Museum of Modern Art, New York AVAILABLE: 10/28/2025 DISTRIBUTION: D.A.P. RETAILER DISC: TRADE PUBLISHING STATUS: Forthcoming AVAILABILITY: Awaiting stock TERRITORY: NA ONLY
Yayoi Kusama: Accumulation No. 1 MoMA One on One Series
Published by The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Text by Midori Yamamura.
A prototype of Pop art, Kusama's innovative and controversial first sculpture—a chair bedecked with canvas phalluses—carried her distinctive "infinity net" into the third dimension
When the Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama (born 1929) moved to New York in 1958, she had already developed her distinctive "infinity net" motif: a signature pattern of interlocking cellular forms painted on room-size canvases with the stated goal of covering "the entire world." With Accumulation No. 1 (1962), Kusama expanded this ambitious fantasy into three dimensions, creating the first in an ongoing series of presciently feminist sculptures composed of household furniture covered with stuffed and hand-sewn canvas phalluses and then painted. Accumulation No. 1 was shown at the Green Gallery in New York in late 1962, in what was widely considered the first group exhibition to focus on Pop art. In this focused publication, art historian Midori Yamamura examines the work within the larger context of Kusama's famed "infinity net" motif, which also encompasses the repeated polka-dot patterns that define her later work.