On the Japanese art island of Naoshima, Yayoi Kusama’s Pumpkin sits at the edge of the sea—bright yellow, covered in black polka dots, and strangely at home against the open water. But behind this playful icon is a story with real stakes. For Kusama, the pumpkin was never just a motif or a decoration. It became a spiritual lifeline: a familiar presence from her childhood that helped her survive overwhelming hallucinations—and translate personal terror into a visual language the world could recognize.In this episode, we step into Kusama’s universe and trace how repetition became rescue. We follow her from the strict expectations of prewar Japan to the cutthroat New York art scene of the 1960s, where she fought to be seen—and helped define a new kind of contemporary art. Along the way, we explore her idea of “self-obliteration”: the urge to dissolve the boundaries of the individual self into an infinite field of dots. More than ninety years old and still working daily, Kusama continues to cover the world in patterns that ask a simple, unsettling question: where do we end—and where does the infinite begin?Additional Resources• View the Masterpiece: High-Resolution Image of “Pumpkin” at Gotanji Pier• Deepen Your Knowledge: Wikipedia Entry on Yayoi Kusama• Official Website: The Yayoi Kusama Museum in TokyoAI tools are used during post-production.Contact & Support:If you enjoy the podcast, please consider leaving a review, subscribe and share an episode with a fellow art lover. We truly appreciate it. For questions, feedback, or episode requests, you can reach us at: podcasts@storywise.studio. This podcast is researched, written, and produced by the art-loving team at Storywise Studios. AI tools are used during post-production.Business: podcasts@storywise.studio Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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