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Yayoi Kusama doesn’t need a race reckoning Who expects the grande dame of installation art to be woke?

She said she's sorry. (Jose-Fuste RAGA/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)

She said she's sorry. (Jose-Fuste RAGA/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)


October 30, 2023   7 mins

“I decided long ago that one must paint terror as well as beauty from life.” So says the titular character in “Pickman’s Model”, a short story by HP Lovecraft about how artists make monsters — or become them. Pickman’s paintings are the stuff of nightmares, rendered so vividly that the narrator of the story, a friend and fellow artist, can barely stand to look at them. “Only a real artist knows the actual anatomy of the terrible,” the narrator shudders. “When we saw the pictures we saw the daemons themselves and were afraid of them.”

Yayoi Kusama creates demons too, although they don’t look like the fictional Pickman’s. Her pet horrors are all the more frightening for their ordinariness. She is afraid of sex, and men, and war, and food. Most of all, she’s afraid of disappearing into the endless white noise of the universe — or, in her parlance, of “Obliteration”. The polka dots she’s been famous for since the Sixties obscure the physical boundaries of whatever form they’re applied to, human or otherwise. Walk through one of her mirror rooms and the singular you disappears. In her autobiography, Infinity Net, Kusama describes watching helplessly as a net-shaped pattern spills off one of her canvases and begins to cover the table, the walls, the contours of her body; it’s difficult to say where the hallucination ends and the art — or the artist — begins.

While her work flirts with the concept of suicide — the ultimate obliteration of the self, by the self — Kusama’s career has been astonishingly long-lived: today, she is a 94-year-old grande dame of the art world. This year saw the publication of a retrospective essay collection, Yayoi Kusama: 1945 to Now, as well as the opening of yet another solo show at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the first two months of tickets for which have already sold out. Kusama has not yet been obliterated.

She might, however, be cancelled.

“Yayoi Kusama Apologizes for Past Racist Remarks”, reads a recent headline from the New York Times, while the San Francisco Chronicle laments Kusama’s upcoming show at the city’s modern art museum: “Japan’s Yayoi Kusama, one of the world’s most prominent creators, has produced work that objectified and demeaned Black people. Does the art community care?”

The allegations of racism centre largely on the autobiography, which came out in 2002, and details Kusama’s fraught relationship with her family, her struggle to be taken seriously as an artist in her native Japan, and the mental health issues that eventually resulted in her voluntary residence at the Tokyo hospital where she has lived since the Seventies. The most damning line from the book, though it does not actually appear in the English version of Infinity Net, is one in which Kusama describes the real estate values of her NYC neighbourhood tanking due to “black people shooting each other out front, and homeless people sleeping there”.

Although the New York Times describes Kusama’s problematic commentary being “surfaced” by the website Hyperallergic in June this year, it would be more accurate to identify this cancellation attempt as the particular obsession of just one man, a writer named Dexter Thomas.

Thomas is the author of the Hyperallergic essay in which he accuses the artist of a “troubling record of anti-Black statements”, and to which as far as I can tell, every story about Kusama’s supposed racism can be traced. His interest in Kusama in turn traces to an earlier essay he wrote for Vice News, in which he describes being banned from the artist’s studio for reasons unclear, though Thomas coyly suggests that his being black might have had something to do with it. And while multiple outlets, including the New York Times, have reproduced the claim that Kusama describes black people in her autobiography as “primitive, hyper-sexualized beings”, the implicit attribution appears to be in error. This is not a quote from Infinity Net; it is Thomas’s subjective interpretation of Kusama’s words.

In fact, reading the autobiography, it struck me that most of Thomas’s claims rely on a subjective (and in some cases, motivated) reading of Kusama’s work or behaviour, rather than her own explicitly stated views. And his main criticism — that “black people make several appearances… as exotic or primitive beings” — I found to be in astonishingly bad faith.

In one case, Kusama recalls that she became fascinated by the idea of travelling to the US after seeing “the exotic face of a little black girl with braided hair” in a picture book — a description that may be off-colour by 2023 standards, but also captures something essential about how strange and inaccessible America seemed to a Japanese child living on the other side of the world in the Forties. In another case, Thomas complains that Kusama describes the lips and genitals of a black participant in one of her naked performance art pieces, the obvious implication being that white characters do not receive similar treatment; he apparently missed the scene just 35 pages later in which Kusama’s boyfriend, a white man, begs the disgusted artist to touch his penis: “It was like a big, desiccated calzone.”

And then there are Kusama’s actual and explicit observations of the way that the sexual liberation of the Sixties became intertwined with issues of race and class, which suggest a far more conscious and critical perspective than Thomas gives her credit for. In one passage contextualising her naked performance artworks against the backdrop of the sexual revolution, she archly notes the phenomenon of privileged white women coming to New York in explicit pursuit of black lovers, “drawn by the legendary sexual prowess of dark, muscular men”.

“Blacks were still discriminated against in mainstream society, but the tendency to prize them as sexual playthings was taking root,” she writes. Perhaps Kusama could have done more to condemn this tendency — that is, if you believe that the job of an artist is to not just observe the world as it is but bloviate about how it ought to be. It’s hard to square the woman who wrote the above lines with the bogeyman conjured by her critics: an unapologetic racist who “seems to luxuriate” in stereotypical depictions of blacks as “hyper-sexual and primitive”.

And it’s hard to see what, exactly, is to be gained from analysing her work through the framework of contemporary American racial politics in the first place. Soleil Ho, the writer at the San Francisco Chronicle who denounced Kusama’s upcoming museum show, suggests that the Yayoi Kusama: 1945 to Now book should have analysed her career in racial terms, lamenting that “the many esteemed curators and critics in the volume also opted to look away”. What Ho and others seem not to realise is that there’s a difference between looking away from a thing, and looking at it from a more productive angle. Despite the myopic convictions of certain American culture critics, not everything is best evaluated through the lens of race; not every story, person, or artwork is best understood as a parable for power, privilege and oppression. And in Kusama’s case, trying to reframe her life and legacy via a reckoning with her alleged racism is like trying to interpret her work by standing blindfolded inside one of her installations and licking the wall. Whatever information you might glean, it will not help you understand the art.

Often, the defence of this or that elderly or deceased artist is a plea for context: people must be understood as a product of their time, their culture, their unique and often immense personal struggles. Yayoi Kusama, who grew up in a famously insular and non-diverse country, who has spent most of her life institutionalised, and who is literally older than Scotch tape, has arguably earned a pass for being less than perfectly enlightened on the issues of 2023 — and anyway, she’s already made the standard-issue apology for her “hurtful and offensive language”. Her critics can hardly ask for more.

But the more important point here isn’t about how woke a 94-year-old mentally ill Japanese woman should be; it’s about what an artist does, and must do, which is to express the truth of the world as he or she sees it. Kusama’s perspective is bleak and terrifying, but it also makes no pretence of moral authority. The woman is terrified of macaroni; she’s not telling anyone else how to live. All she does, and all she has ever done — in paint, in words, in naked choreography — is to describe what she sees. To paint from life, as Lovecraft’s Pickman put it.

Sometimes that means capturing beauty; sometimes it means terror, or something worse. There’s a famous, and famously controversial, painting by Gustav Courbet called “L’origine du monde”. It’s an image of an anonymous woman, naked from the waist down, her thighs spread to show her vulva. The painting has often been criticised as misogynistic, and perhaps it is, but it also articulates something true: Look, it says. This is where we come from. This is how we are made.

Yayoi Kusama, with her dots, her obliteration, is saying something true, too: this is how we unravel. And her autobiography, insensitive though it may be, is a truthful articulation of reality as she experienced it. Rather than punishing her for this, or demanding a reckoning and an apology, perhaps we might reckon with that reality ourselves, as we do with her art, and leave the artist out of it.

Kusama has always showed us the same thing; what changes is who else is looking, and how. The dot paintings that once challenged and infuriated her critics are now considered pop art masterpieces; a naked performance art piece that once resulted in scandalised calls to the police by MoMA officials is now lauded on the museum’s website for its daring irreverence. But Kusama’s view of the world — her obsessions, her fears, her fixations — remains the same. She is still seeking obliteration. She will probably chase it until she’s dead.

And what does she owe to the rest of us? Only the truth of the world as she sees it. Nothing less, nothing more.

At the end of “Pickman’s Model”, the narrator, Pickman’s friend, views a ghastly portrait of a monstrous creature in Pickman’s studio: “The monster was there—it glared and gnawed and gnawed and glared—and I knew that only a suspension of Nature’s laws could ever let a man paint a thing like that without a model”. It’s only after he unrolls a small scrap of paper that was pinned to the canvas that he understands the source of his friend’s demons. The secret of those horrible, haunting paintings. Because there it is: the same glaring, gnawing monster.

“By God,” he says. “It was a photograph from life.”


Kat Rosenfield is an UnHerd columnist and co-host of the Feminine Chaos podcast. Her latest novel is You Must Remember This.

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Tom Lewis
Tom Lewis
1 year ago

Some people are born to create, others to destroy !
It seems as if the puritans are on the up.

Anthony Roe
Anthony Roe
1 year ago

A lot of the problems with someone like Kasuma arise from her not being an artist at all. She is a mentally ill woman with a compulsion to make marks and images. These are both closed and repetitive (in some circles doing the same works for 70 years is considered a mark of authenticity, like Lowry). It was fortunate or unfortunate that she came to prominence when her work aligned with the most fashionable art movement of the time Op and KInetics. The best art is always a dialogue between an artist and something or someone else, the closed off world of the ‘Outsider’ artist never makes that connection.

Brendan O'Leary
Brendan O'Leary
1 year ago
Reply to  Anthony Roe

Interesting comment. Thanks.

Allison Barrows
Allison Barrows
1 year ago
Reply to  Anthony Roe

Hear, hear. The professional artists I trained with and worked along side for 40+ years create beautiful paintings and sculptures that grace cathedrals and the homes of private collectors, commercial book, magazine, and album covers, animation studios, and permanent collections in the worlds great galleries and museums. They have spouses and children and mortgages, serve on school board committees and are active in local service organizations. They coach their kids’ basketball teams and don’t wear ludicrous neon costumes to call attention to themselves; quite the contrary: the work they create speaks on their behalf. You wouldn’t have recognized the late Frank Frazetta in line at a supermarket.
Elevating nuts and charlatans in the art world is nothing new – remember Basquiat, whose hideous, talent-free dawbings were all the rage until the guy faded away after he OD’d on heroine? That some attention-seeking race w***e is attempting to make his bones off a mentally ill little old lady makes me wonder why anyone would help him on his way with articles like this.

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
1 year ago

Agree with this excellent comment on the 20th/21st Century’s tragic elevation of pseudo artists who merely “push boundaries” and “surface” subjective “oppression” without ever finding or creating beauty—but I appreciate articles like this because race-baiting, myopic frauds deserve to be called out.

Steve Murray
Steve Murray
1 year ago
Reply to  Anthony Roe

Yes. Other replies to your comment have said much that i’d have wished to say, so i’ll just add that what she produces is the equivalent of the fashionable “history paintings” that dominated the walls of institutions until Impressionism came along as the proverbial “breath of fresh air”.
Some might find her output and an analogy with history painting odd, but it’s the way in which the prevailing institutions fawned upon the ultimate sterility and lack of vision beyond a very narrow bandwidth.

Nell Clover
Nell Clover
1 year ago

It seems the rise of communication technologies has given our poison pens more space to write and a larger audience to read. First this destroyed the community, then the family, and now this will destroy each and everyone one of us.

In our modern, inclusive, tolerant age we will judge you, we will judge you by the sins of your father, we will judge you by your words and not your actions, we will judge you harshly, we will exclude you, and we will offer you no forgiveness without first humiliating you.

What an enlightened time to be alive.

Last edited 1 year ago by Nell Clover
Dominic A
Dominic A
1 year ago
Reply to  Nell Clover

I think it’s possible that people were kind of judgey in the past too. Sometimes to the point of literal-excommunication, death, imprisonment, war, banishment; rather than cancellation or a twitter-kreig.

Just as the Boomers, contrary to their self-belief, did not actually invent sex, Millenials did not discover the concepts of judgement, shaming and ideological purity.

Albert McGloan
Albert McGloan
1 year ago
Reply to  Dominic A

The point of “cancellation” and “twitter-krieg” (also described as ‘spectral rape’) is to inflict real-life suffering by denying the target a living and relationships with people in the real world. Do you think people who use a hammer & sickle in their Twitter profile and laud the actions of Hamas aren’t serious about “death, imprisonment, war”? The West is currently slouching in a very strange but not unfamiliar direction and any attempt to pretend this is just ‘business as usual’ is wishful thinking at best.

Dominic A
Dominic A
1 year ago
Reply to  Albert McGloan

As to your first point – I know.
Second point – dunno about that, seems to me that a cursory look at the last two centuries throws up any number of very serious, strange, potentially civilisation-destroying ideas and movements. The novelty right now probably has to do with the internet, phone, social media – unleashing freedoms and challenges (and fails) – as did the printing press, the threshing machine, the spinning jenny, the ‘Death of God’, Das Capital, Mein Kampf, Human Rights Movement, The Pill, Rock n Roll LSD, MDMA…’. None of them ‘destroyed community…family’ and ‘each and everyone one of us’. I would have thought that NC to welcome a bit of historical perspective amidst all the millennial hype.

Albert McGloan
Albert McGloan
1 year ago
Reply to  Dominic A

If the printing press gave us protestantism (witch-mania, Biblical literalism, unprecedented civilizational vandalism, religious wars etc.) then Clover’s fear of what communication technology is doing is justified.

Richard Craven
Richard Craven
1 year ago

Dexter Thomas is a stupid woke t**d who badly needs to be told to do one.

Michelle Johnston
Michelle Johnston
1 year ago

“Often, the defence of this or that elderly or deceased artist is a plea for context: people must be understood as a product of their time, their culture, their unique and often immense personal struggles. Yayoi Kusama, who grew up in a famously insular and non-diverse country, who has spent most of her life institutionalised, and who is literally older than Scotch tape, has arguably earned a pass for being less than perfectly enlightened on the issues of 2023 — and anyway, she’s already made the standard-issue apology for her “hurtful and offensive language”. Her critics can hardly ask for more.”
I am no fan of Kat but given I have a growing understanding of Japan from the inside and I have been close to mental health issues through my parents being mental health professionals all of my life (art created by the mentally ill is fascinating in its insights of the mind) this is spot on.
I went to Kusima’s exhibition in Matsumoto in April. Good art tells you more about the world in which we live, her art tells you about the compensations she uses to manage her way through, just as every single member of humanity has compensations.
One of the fascinating qualities of a country that has managed to hold on better than many to its cultural template is how very counter-intuitive its disruptive art is but oddly in a way that still seems to be routed in its past, there is a continuity even in rebellion.
Finally, I much prefer any of her compensation art to the strange and bizarre disruptive art I have witnessed in the Tate Modern or the Guggenheim in New York.

Last edited 1 year ago by Michelle Johnston
Julian Farrows
Julian Farrows
1 year ago

There are certain aspects of leftist thought that remind me of the fairy-tale the Snow Queen wherein a child gets a shard of ice in his eye which distorts his vision and makes appear ugly to him.

R Wright
R Wright
1 year ago

TL;DR Vice News hacks are Buzzfeed levels of journalistic integrity

Dumetrius
Dumetrius
1 year ago
Reply to  R Wright

Vice, Buzzfeed and lately The Onion all became mouthpieces for the trans ideology in their dying years, so that Vice would be used for point-scoring on race wouldn’t be surprising.