On view

Modern and Contemporary Art
Theodora Walton William Walton III Pavilion

Large White Net,

1958

Yayoi Kusama, born 1929, Matsumoto, Japan; active New York, NY and Tokyo
y1965-252
From a distance this painting appears to be a continuous pale white field. Closer examination, however, reveals a thin veil of arcs and skeins of paint forming a net across the surface, through which a blue-toned ground is visible. Created during Kusama’s first months as an émigré in New York in the late 1950s, Large White Net and other early paintings synthesized her response to the currents of abstract art that she encountered in the city. Reflecting her interest in seriality and repetition, her works are feats of endurance, made in sessions that lasted up to fifty hours, often ending when she divided the canvas into multiple paintings. Kusama’s lengthy process entailed using small, rhythmic gestures to produce an accretion of marks that seem to extend beyond the canvas indefinitely, reflecting her interest in compositional structures that suggest infinity.

More Context

Handbook Entry

An even layer of dark paint; above that, a veil of white; and, finally, pallid arcs and skeins of paint that articulate small apertures through which the underlayers are visible: such simplicity of production belies the subtlety of effect. Yayoi Kusama’s careful manipulation of the thickness, fluidity, and density of the overlying web of lines renders a visual fabric in flux, wherein inchoate forms press forward or recede into the picture plane. As the title ­suggests, the painting evokes a net, and in that sense can be seen as a machine-woven canvas wrapped in a fabric of erratic loops of paint. Created during Kusama’s first months as an émigré in New York, <em>Large White Net</em> reflects the artist’s keen sensitivity to the artistic currents she encountered, and is fraught with her own concerns about obsession, repetition, seriality, and non-composition.

Information

Title
Large White Net
Dates

1958

Maker
Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
125 x 184 cm. (49 3/16 x 72 7/16 in.) frame: 136.2 × 188.4 × 8.9 cm (53 5/8 × 74 3/16 × 3 1/2 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Tepper
Object Number
y1965-252
Inscription
Painted on back: Yayoi Kusama / 1958 / No. Z.P. / Gres Gallery
Culture
Materials

Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Tepper, East Orange, NJ; donated to Princeton University Art Museum, 1965.