Renowned Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama’s The obliteration room 2002–present is an interactive work initially developed by Kusama in collaboration with the Queensland Art Gallery as a children’s project for ‘The Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art’ in 2022.

The obliteration room consists of a domestic environment recreated in the gallery space, complete with locally sourced furniture and ornamentation, all of which are painted completely white. While this may suggest an everyday topography drained of all colour, it specificity functions as a blank canvas to be invigorated — or, in Kusama’s vocabulary, ‘obliterated’ — through the application to every available surface of brightly coloured stickers in the shape of dots. The choice of a domestic environment with specifically local characteristics is intended to create an air of familiarity that makes participants, especially children, comfortable enough to engage with the work with little or no prompting.

The obliteration room 2002–present

Yayoi Kusama, Japan b.1929 / The obliteration room (installed views) 2002-present / Furniture, white paint, dot stickers / Dimensions variable / Collaboration between Yayoi Kusama and Queensland Art Gallery. Commissioned Queensland Art Gallery. Gift of the artist through the QAG Foundation 2012 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Yayoi Kusama

Yayoi Kusama, Japan b.1929 / The obliteration room (installed views) 2002-present / Furniture, white paint, dot stickers / Dimensions variable / Collaboration between Yayoi Kusama and Queensland Art Gallery. Commissioned Queensland Art Gallery. Gift of the artist through the QAG Foundation 2012 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Yayoi Kusama / View full image

Yayoi Kusama, Japan b.1929 / The obliteration room (installed views) 2002-present / Furniture, white paint, dot stickers / Collaboration between Yayoi Kusama and Queensland Art Gallery, Australia. Commissioned Queensland Art Gallery. Gift of the artist through the QAG Foundation 2012 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Yayoi Kusama

Yayoi Kusama, Japan b.1929 / The obliteration room (installed views) 2002-present / Furniture, white paint, dot stickers / Collaboration between Yayoi Kusama and Queensland Art Gallery, Australia. Commissioned Queensland Art Gallery. Gift of the artist through the QAG Foundation 2012 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Yayoi Kusama / View full image

Dots first emerged in Kusama’s work in the early 1960s as the structural inverse of the Infinity net paintings (illustrated) that preoccupied her after 1958, as the negative spaces between the loops of her painterly netting. During this period, dots began to appear on the surfaces of her sculptures and installations, which recalled the hallucinations she had suffered as a child, in which her surroundings were entirely covered with repeating patterns. Later in the decade, dots had developed into an artistic strategy that the artist described as ‘self-obliteration’. A prominent feature of her ‘happenings’ and performances of the period, and usually daubed onto the bodies of participants, dots symbolically neutralised the ego, which Kusama blamed for the horror and destruction resulting from warfare.

Infinity nets 2000

Yayoi Kusama, Japan b.1929 / Infinity nets 2000 / Synthetic polymer paint on canvas / 162 x 130cm / The Kenneth and Yasuko Myer Collection of Contemporary Asian Art. Purchased 2001 with funds from The Myer Foundation, a project of the Sidney Myer Centenary Celebration 1899-1999, through the QAG Foundation / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Yayoi Kusama

Yayoi Kusama, Japan b.1929 / Infinity nets 2000 / Synthetic polymer paint on canvas / 162 x 130cm / The Kenneth and Yasuko Myer Collection of Contemporary Asian Art. Purchased 2001 with funds from The Myer Foundation, a project of the Sidney Myer Centenary Celebration 1899-1999, through the QAG Foundation / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Yayoi Kusama / View full image

Kusama’s dots have proliferated as her installations have grown in scale and ambition, and she continues to frame the dots as traces of her own childhood trauma. The past decade in fact has seen direct representations in the artist’s work of an idealised, ‘lost’ childhood. The exuberance of children buzzing around The obliteration room, stickers accumulating on its clinical surfaces, bears a striking resemblance to this imagined childhood. Indeed, the work functions by mobilising the desires of children to transgress the ‘look but don’t touch’ restriction of conventional museum culture by associating this sensibility with that of parental restrictions in the family home.

The white room is gradually covered with stickers over the course of the exhibition, the space changing measurably with the passage of time as the dots accumulate with the help of thousands of collaborators. Such is the appeal of the work, particularly on social media, that its popularity has proliferated around the world. The extraordinary capacity of Kusama’s work, which adapts to diverse contexts and audiences, underlines the fact that, at 85 years of age, she is more of her time now that at any point in her long career.

Delve deeper into Yayoi Kusama's works in the QAGOMA Collection

Soul under the moon 2002

Yayoi Kusama, Japan b.1929 / Soul under the moon 2002 / Mirrors, ultra violet lights, water, plastic, nylon thread, timber, synthetic polymer paint / 340 x 712.1 x 600cm (installed) / The Kenneth and Yasuko Myer Collection of Contemporary Asian Art. Purchased 2002 with funds from Michael Sidney Myer and The Myer Foundation, a project of the Sidney Myer Centenary Celebration 1899-1999, through the QAG Foundation and The Yayoi Kusama Queensland Art Gallery Foundation Appeal / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Yayoi Kusama

Yayoi Kusama, Japan b.1929 / Soul under the moon 2002 / Mirrors, ultra violet lights, water, plastic, nylon thread, timber, synthetic polymer paint / 340 x 712.1 x 600cm (installed) / The Kenneth and Yasuko Myer Collection of Contemporary Asian Art. Purchased 2002 with funds from Michael Sidney Myer and The Myer Foundation, a project of the Sidney Myer Centenary Celebration 1899-1999, through the QAG Foundation and The Yayoi Kusama Queensland Art Gallery Foundation Appeal / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Yayoi Kusama / View full image

Narcissus garden 1966/2002

Yayoi Kusama, Japan b.1929 / Narcissus garden 1966/2002 / Stainless steel balls / 2000 balls (approx.) / Site specific work for ‘The 4th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art’. Gift of the artist through the QAG Foundation 2002 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Yayoi Kusama, Yayoi Kusama Studio Inc / Photograph: N. Harth © QAGOMA

Yayoi Kusama, Japan b.1929 / Narcissus garden 1966/2002 / Stainless steel balls / 2000 balls (approx.) / Site specific work for ‘The 4th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art’. Gift of the artist through the QAG Foundation 2002 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Yayoi Kusama, Yayoi Kusama Studio Inc / Photograph: N. Harth © QAGOMA / View full image

Flowers that bloom at midnight 2011

Yayoi Kusama, Japan b.1929 / Flowers that bloom at midnight 2011 / Fibreglass-reinforced plastic, urethane paint, metal frame / 183 x 307 x 178cm / Purchased 2012 with funds from the Josephine Ulrick and Win Schubert Diversity Foundation through the QAG Foundation / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Yayoi Kusama

Yayoi Kusama, Japan b.1929 / Flowers that bloom at midnight 2011 / Fibreglass-reinforced plastic, urethane paint, metal frame / 183 x 307 x 178cm / Purchased 2012 with funds from the Josephine Ulrick and Win Schubert Diversity Foundation through the QAG Foundation / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Yayoi Kusama / View full image

Pumpkin 1992

Yayoi Kusama, Japan b.1929 / Pumpkin 1992 / Colour screenprint on paper / 84 x 71cm / Purchased 1996 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Yayoi Kusama

Yayoi Kusama, Japan b.1929 / Pumpkin 1992 / Colour screenprint on paper / 84 x 71cm / Purchased 1996 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Yayoi Kusama / View full image

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