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Helen Betts | all galleries >> Rediscovering Home >> Rediscovering Home: Washington, D.C. >> 'Infinity Mirrors,' by Yayoi Kusama at the Hirshhorn Museum > 'Phalli's Field'
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05-MAR-2017

'Phalli's Field'

The Yayoi Kusama exhibit “Infinity Mirrors” at the Smithsonian’s Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden http://hirshhorn.si.edu/kusama/ is the hottest show in Washington this year and is almost impossible to get into. Its six mirrored rooms are fantastical and fascinating, but you have to spend about 30-45 minutes in line waiting to get into each one, after which you are allowed exactly 20 SECONDS to view it along with two other people. The museum staff have stopwatches and throw you out when your time is up. Needless to say, not a good situation for picture taking, but we did what we could under the difficult circumstances.

A description of this room from the Hirshhorn:

Infinity Mirror Room—Phalli's Field
1965/2016
Stuffed cotton, board, and mirrors
Collection of the artist
Kusama spent much of her time between 1962 and 1964 sewing thousands of stuffed fabric tubers and grafting them to furniture and found objects to create her Accumulation sculptures. She exhibited the works together in an attempt to create hallucinatory scenes of phallic surfaces but found the labor involved in making them physically and mentally taxing. In response to the labor intensity of this work, she started to utilize mirrors to achieve similar repetition. Infinity Mirror Room— Phalli’ s Field was perhaps the most important breakthrough for Kusama during this immensely fruitful period. The reflective surfaces allowed her vision to transcend the physical limitations of her own productivity. Furthermore, the mirrors created a participatory experience by casting the visitor as the subject of the work, a feature that the artist demonstrated through a provocative series of self-portraits in which she used her body to activate the space. This work first appeared in the exhibition Floor Show, held at Castellane Gallery, in New York, in 1965.

A bit oversize, posted earlier:

Nikon D810 ,Nikkor AF-S 24-70mm f/2.8G ED
1/125s f/6.3 at 24.0mm iso1600 hide exif
Full EXIF Info
Date/Time05-Mar-2017 23:28:29
MakeNikon
ModelNIKON D810
Flash UsedNo
Focal Length24 mm
Exposure Time1/125 sec
Aperturef/6.3
ISO Equivalent1600
Exposure Bias-0.67
White Balance
Metering Mode
JPEG Quality
Exposure Program
Focus Distance

other sizes: small medium original auto
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Sam Rua29-May-2017 00:09
Wow. Very cool.
Julie Oldfield08-Mar-2017 00:01
Love it!! V
Jola Dziubinska07-Mar-2017 22:25
Lovely forms at your feet, great shot, Helen. V.
Martin Lamoon07-Mar-2017 19:33
WOW!
Gill Kopy07-Mar-2017 01:47
Totally cool and such an interesting story attached - can see why this is so "hot" ! V
Tom Munson06-Mar-2017 19:07
This is really cool, Helen.
exzim06-Mar-2017 16:37
WOW
Don06-Mar-2017 10:49
A remarkable creation.
Pieter Bos06-Mar-2017 10:18
Multi, Multi, Multi selfie! Amazing place! ~V
marie-jose wolff06-Mar-2017 09:59
A truly original exhibition! V
Chris Morton06-Mar-2017 08:25
not sure if its good news that there aren't as many balloons as one thought; will wait for mind to stop boggling
Ton, Ben & Rob Nagtegaal06-Mar-2017 07:04
Beautiful and colorful shot Helen, great work. V
globalgadabout06-Mar-2017 06:45
sounds as rushed as a visit to Antelope Canyon...certainly an engaging scene...enjoy the multiple Helens and Tims here too...
Long Bach Nguyen06-Mar-2017 06:29
great shot and love the sharpness and clarity and exposure Helen
John Reynolds LRPS06-Mar-2017 06:16
Fascinating exhibition. V.