In celebration of the National Gallery of Victoria’s (NGV) world-premiere blockbuster exhibition Yayoi Kusama, more than 60 plane trees along St Kilda Road in front of NGV International will be wrapped in a pink-and-white polka-dot design developed especially for Melbourne by the artist.
The artwork, Ascension of Polka Dots on the Trees, is one of several free artworks that visitors can experience beyond the walls of the exhibition, alongside a site-specific artwork created for NGV International’s waterwall, polka-dotted inflatables in the Great Hall, and a children’s exhibition.
Extending Kusama’s kaleidoscopic worldview beyond the walls of the NGV, Ascension of Polka Dots on the Trees will envelop the trees along Melbourne’s iconic grand boulevard. Kusama initially presented Ascension of Polka Dots on the Trees at the Kirishima Open Air Museum in Japan in 2002 where she displayed red-and-white trees, but for Melbourne she has created a special iteration in a bold pink-and-white polka-dotted fabric.
Nearby, NGV International’s glass waterwall will be covered with a pink-and-black polka dot design, enticing visitors into Kusama’s creative world through this iconic Melbourne entryway.
Inside NGV International, visitors will also encounter Narcissus Garden, 1966/2024, a new iteration of the installation Kusama first presented unofficially at the Venice Biennale in 1966. This installation comprises 1400 silver balls, each 30cm in diameter and presented en masse as visitors enter the building. This sea of mirrored spheres will be presented in front of the waterwall and parts of Federation Court, creating a reflective landscape that envelops the spectator.
Also in Federation Court, visitors will discover a towering 5-metre-tall bronze pumpkin sculpture newly acquired by the NGV. Twisting under the skylit atrium, Dancing Pumpkin, 2020, is one of Kusama’s largest and most ambitious imaginings of her beloved pumpkin motif to date.
In the Great Hall, there will also be a presentation of Dots Obsession, originally conceived by the artist in 1996. Hanging overhead and beneath Leonard French’s iconic cut-glass in Great Hall, this spectacular work features large yellow-and-black inflatable vinyl spheres covered in the artist’s signature polka-dot pattern. For Kusama, dots symbolise both the individual and, when presented in great numbers, the cosmos.
Also on display in the NGV’s FREE children’s gallery is The Obliteration Room, 2002–present, a large-scale, interactive installation that invites audiences of all ages to transform a stark white domestic interior into a kaleidoscope of coloured dots.
Born in Japan in 1929, Kusama is one of the world’s most important and recognised practitioners working today. She is renowned globally for her singular and idiosyncratic use of pattern, colour and symbols to create immersive, thought-provoking and intensely personal works of art that transcend language and borders. She has made indelible contributions to key art movements of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, including minimalism, pop art and feminist art.
Yayoi Kusama will be on display from 15 December 2024 to 21 April 2025 at NGV International, St Kilda Road, Melbourne. Entry fees apply. Tickets and information are available via the NGV website: NGV.MELBOURNE