Yayoi Kusama</a>: Colour Song", a solo exhibition featuring 7 recent paintings from the artist's most significant series of work, 'Infinity Nets'. As an internationally-acclaimed artist, Kusama has brought inspiration to people all over the world, and she continues to create artworks vigorously to date. This exhibition is dedicated to the artist's resolve and devotion to art by presenting her most recent renditions of the series.</p><p>Yayoi Kusama has been highly valuated as a vanguard of prominent art movements in the late 20th century such as pop art and minimalism. Although the artist is now well-known for her colourful and 'pop' artworks, as well as polka dots and pumpkin motifs, the 'Infinity Nets' series could be said to be her starting point. This series was first shown in the 1950s in New York. "I would cover a canvas with nets, then continue painting them on the table, on the floor, and finally on my own body," the artist explains. She has been experiencing hallucinations where her surroundings are covered completely with the pattern of polka-dots or nets since childhood, and by repeatedly painting the same motif obsessively, she manages to overcome her fear.&nbsp;</p><p>Kusama never stops challenging herself to push boundaries. Her artistic practice now spans painting, drawing, collage, sculpture, performance, video, print, installation and much more. Yet, her visionary philosophy remains constant: it harkens to the universe, elevating her very self to the realm of the cosmic. Containing such concepts in its core, the 'Infinity Nets' continues to represent her oeuvre well amongst her other brilliant bodies of works. This exhibition boasts a concentration of these paintings which are each unique in their diverse texture and movement, as well as their combinations of various colours and metallic tones.&nbsp;</p><p><br></p>" />

Yayoi Kusama: Colour Song

Jun 08, 2017 - Jul 15, 2017

Ota Fine Arts Singapore is delighted to present "Yayoi Kusama: Colour Song", a solo exhibition featuring 7 recent paintings from the artist's most significant series of work, 'Infinity Nets'. As an internationally-acclaimed artist, Kusama has brought inspiration to people all over the world, and she continues to create artworks vigorously to date. This exhibition is dedicated to the artist's resolve and devotion to art by presenting her most recent renditions of the series.

Yayoi Kusama has been highly valuated as a vanguard of prominent art movements in the late 20th century such as pop art and minimalism. Although the artist is now well-known for her colourful and 'pop' artworks, as well as polka dots and pumpkin motifs, the 'Infinity Nets' series could be said to be her starting point. This series was first shown in the 1950s in New York. "I would cover a canvas with nets, then continue painting them on the table, on the floor, and finally on my own body," the artist explains. She has been experiencing hallucinations where her surroundings are covered completely with the pattern of polka-dots or nets since childhood, and by repeatedly painting the same motif obsessively, she manages to overcome her fear. 

Kusama never stops challenging herself to push boundaries. Her artistic practice now spans painting, drawing, collage, sculpture, performance, video, print, installation and much more. Yet, her visionary philosophy remains constant: it harkens to the universe, elevating her very self to the realm of the cosmic. Containing such concepts in its core, the 'Infinity Nets' continues to represent her oeuvre well amongst her other brilliant bodies of works. This exhibition boasts a concentration of these paintings which are each unique in their diverse texture and movement, as well as their combinations of various colours and metallic tones. 



Ota Fine Arts Singapore is delighted to present "Yayoi Kusama: Colour Song", a solo exhibition featuring 7 recent paintings from the artist's most significant series of work, 'Infinity Nets'. As an internationally-acclaimed artist, Kusama has brought inspiration to people all over the world, and she continues to create artworks vigorously to date. This exhibition is dedicated to the artist's resolve and devotion to art by presenting her most recent renditions of the series.

Yayoi Kusama has been highly valuated as a vanguard of prominent art movements in the late 20th century such as pop art and minimalism. Although the artist is now well-known for her colourful and 'pop' artworks, as well as polka dots and pumpkin motifs, the 'Infinity Nets' series could be said to be her starting point. This series was first shown in the 1950s in New York. "I would cover a canvas with nets, then continue painting them on the table, on the floor, and finally on my own body," the artist explains. She has been experiencing hallucinations where her surroundings are covered completely with the pattern of polka-dots or nets since childhood, and by repeatedly painting the same motif obsessively, she manages to overcome her fear. 

Kusama never stops challenging herself to push boundaries. Her artistic practice now spans painting, drawing, collage, sculpture, performance, video, print, installation and much more. Yet, her visionary philosophy remains constant: it harkens to the universe, elevating her very self to the realm of the cosmic. Containing such concepts in its core, the 'Infinity Nets' continues to represent her oeuvre well amongst her other brilliant bodies of works. This exhibition boasts a concentration of these paintings which are each unique in their diverse texture and movement, as well as their combinations of various colours and metallic tones. 



Artists on show

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7 Lock Road, 02-13 Gillman Barracks Singapore 108935

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Suzann Victor</a>, following her latest residency. The exhibition comprises over 20 new artworks, inviting viewers to explore the nuanced possibilities of print through light and shadow, and to create their own secondary light-prints on the gallery walls.</p><p>Highlights on show include The Image Stammers I and II, Afterglow and Obsidian Moon, where Victor manipulates transparent acrylic discs to produce intentional effects of “printing” light and shadow on the wall. The works return viewers to physical experience and spatial experimentation – an antidote to an age dominated by digitally-mediated experiences.</p><p>Image credits: Suzann Victor, The Image Stammers II, 2024, Glaze medium on acrylic discs, 143 x 141 x 41.5 cm. © Suzann Victor / STPI. Photo courtesy of the artist and STPI – Creative Workshop &amp; Gallery, Singapore.</p><p><br></p>" />
Salgado (b. 1944, Brazil). It spotlights the Amazon region and its ecosystems coming under the threat of deforestation and climate change, while featuring the voices, portraits, and perspectives of the Indigenous communities who live in – and with – the largest rainforest on the planet.</p><p>This multisensory and immersive exhibition, curated and designed by Lélia Wanick Salgado, comprises over 200 photographs, a soundtrack by Jean-Michel Jarre, two projection rooms, video testimonies from Indigenous leaders, tactile image plates for the visually impaired, and a space dedicated to Instituto Terra, the reforestation non-governmental organisation founded by the Salgados. Amazônia powerfully demonstrates the beauty and majesty of the Amazon region, while issuing an important call to protect and conserve what has been called the “lungs of the world”.</p><p><br></p>" />
Rina Banerjee</a>, <a target="_blank" href=https://www.mutualart.com/Exhibition/Yayoi-Kusama--Colour-Song/"/Artist/Maria-Farrar/9072DC341FFFFFC9">Maria Farrar</a>, <a target="_blank" href=https://www.mutualart.com/Exhibition/Yayoi-Kusama--Colour-Song/"/Artist/Mannat-Gandotra/1D923DEA2437330A">Mannat Gandotra</a>, <a target="_blank" href=https://www.mutualart.com/Exhibition/Yayoi-Kusama--Colour-Song/"/Artist/Hilmi-Johandi/DE247D1EE3409688">Hilmi Johandi</a>, <a target="_blank" href=https://www.mutualart.com/Exhibition/Yayoi-Kusama--Colour-Song/"/Artist/Zai-Kuning/80B827C52EF30478">Zai Kuning</a>, <a target="_blank" href=https://www.mutualart.com/Exhibition/Yayoi-Kusama--Colour-Song/"/Artist/Yayoi-Kusama/7D8654193084E33E">Yayoi Kusama</a>, <a target="_blank" href=https://www.mutualart.com/Exhibition/Yayoi-Kusama--Colour-Song/"/Artist/Atreyu-Moniaga/B529E562EF47A1F6">Atreyu Moniaga</a> and <a target="_blank" href=https://www.mutualart.com/Exhibition/Yayoi-Kusama--Colour-Song/"/Artist/Guo-Liang-Tan/C33471349270CAD7">Guo-Liang Tan</a>. Ranging from drawing and painting to sculpture, the works of these artists come into conversation with one another within the gallery space, and reflect the diversity of expressions of contemporary art today.&nbsp;</p><p>Maria Farrar (b. 1988, Philippines) depicts scenes derived from her everyday life or from fragments of memories, bringing forth personal themes in her work while exploring the presentation and behaviours of women of today. Sleepless (2024) was inspired by Farrar's imagination of insomniacs blinking in the dark, waiting for the sun to rise – a humorous scene that she tries to capture in her work. Double bells of the analog alarm clock are depicted which Farrar amusingly describes as "ears". The bottom of the clocks have eyelashes attached to them, mimicking a lady with her eyes closed, adding another layer of playfulness to the image.</p><p>Contrastingly, Atreyu Moniaga's (b. 1987, Indonesia) paintings embody the fantasies and anxieties of urban dwellers from a younger generation. His otherworldly compositions reveal a whimsical universe of mystical creatures, ornamental plants, and spirited characters that one may associate with animation films. Brimming with vivid colours and intricate details, the figures in his works are often surrounded by lush, surreal landscapes, reflecting the unpredictability and chaotic journey of personal growth. These motifs also reflect the conflicting emotions of restlessness, resilience, fear, courage, exhilaration and uncertainty that one often experiences during their maturity.</p><p>With a similarly vibrant palette, is Yayoi Kusama's (b. 1929, Japan) FOOTPRINTS OF FIREWORKS (2014). Part of her My Eternal Soul series, the painting features bold lines and colours that envelope the canvas together with varied biomorphic shapes. It also synthesizes contrasting concepts and forms of positive and negative spaces, figuration and abstraction, microscopic and macroscopic views of the universe, providing a glimpse into Kusama's state of mind. Ultimately, it is a painting that reflects on love, death, humanity and the artist's relationship with the universe and beyond.</p><p>Likewise, Mannat Gandotra's (b. 2001, India) paintings exude an intense energy through her dynamic compositional structures of line, colour and form. In creating her paintings, Gandotra sees herself creating problems and trying to resolve those problems in an ever-expanding space. Lines are sometimes straight, curved or fractured, and colours go next to each other in unusual combinations; elements clash and bounce off one another, and yet sit together in a dissonant atmosphere, which the artist describes as "fighting like siblings or residing like neighbours or in some paintings seducing each other".</p><p>In contrast, Guo-Liang Tan's (b. 1980, Singapore) indirect approach to painterly expression has led to the development of a new series of works that feature geometric patterns created by folding fabric. In this new series, Tan utilizes the inherent memory of the translucent aeronautical fabric to create folds and wrinkles which reappear as traces through the layering and depositing of colour pigments on the stretched fabric. The coloured surfaces highlighted by the textures and traces seem to embody residual images of the production process, visualizing the memory of the fabric itself. These are contemplative yet restless paintings, always in the process of making, thinking, feeling and taking shape.</p><p>On the other hand, Hilmi Johandi's (b. 1987, Singapore) paintings feature deconstructed motifs derived from the national archives, as he reinvents spaces, planes and forms. Drawn mainly from postcards of Singapore from the 1980s-90s, these archival references feature places of interest that carry particular visual styles from specific eras and social contexts. Spaces in the paintings are broken up, partitioned, and collaged back together to create an uncanny world that is at once familiar yet foreign upon observation.</p><p>Zai Kuning (b. 1964, Singapore) adopts a research-based approach as part of his artistic process. For nearly two decades, Zai has been exploring the world of the Orang Laut -- "sea gypsies" or nomadic indigenous fishermen living in the Riau Archipelago. His work presented in this exhibition, From the series Brutality of Fact (2007-2015), is inspired by his interactions with the Orang Laut and his observations of their ways of life.</p><p>Lastly, having grown up in mixed cultural communities as far apart as Kolkata and New York City, Rina Banerjee's (b. 1963, India) multi-faceted creations fuse the boundaries between East and West. There is a thoughtful sensitivity in the multiple materials that Banerjee uses in her work. Be it painting or through the technique of collage, Banerjee is able to appropriately represent the density of the urban experience by suggesting disparate phenomena to coexist within the same framework. The figures and motifs present in her work metaphorically allude to the urban, post-colonial, expatriated community of which she is a part.</p><p><br></p>" />
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