Lot 028
Morning
Yayoi KUSAMA (Japanese, 1929)
1981
Pastel, ink and acrylic on paper, collage
63.9 x 43.6 cm
Estimate
TWD 1,300,000-2,200,000
HKD 319,000-539,000
USD 40,800-69,000
CNY 281,000-476,000
Sold Price
Signature
Signed lower right Yayoi Kusama and dated 1981
Signed reverse Yayoi Kusama , dated 1981 and
titled Morning in kanji
PROVENANCE
Private Collection, Tokyo
Mallet Japan, Tokyo, October 26, 2007, lot 56
Tokyo Bayside Gallery, Tokyo
Phillips, Hong Kong, November 26, 2024, lot 127
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Signed reverse Yayoi Kusama , dated 1981 and
titled Morning in kanji
PROVENANCE
Private Collection, Tokyo
Mallet Japan, Tokyo, October 26, 2007, lot 56
Tokyo Bayside Gallery, Tokyo
Phillips, Hong Kong, November 26, 2024, lot 127
Acquired from the above by the present owner
This lot is accompanied by a registration card issued by the artist’s studio.
+ OVERVIEW
Yayoi Kusama (b. 1929) constructs an artistic universe that hovers between hallucination and reality through her vivid polka dots and net-like motifs. She transforms the recurring visual hallucinations of her
childhood into a creative language, making art a pathway for self-healing. “Self-Obliteration” refers to the dissolution of the individual into the boundless universe through infinitely extending imagery, while the repeated layering of “infinity nets” and “polkadots” embodies the inner rhythm of life’s continuous proliferation. Morning (1981) reflects a moment of introspective transition following her return to Japan from New York. The piece combines pastel, ink, and collage, placing a realistic bird silhouette within an oval composition, surrounded by delicate, celllike network patterns. Subtle ink washes create a profound atmosphere, allowing figuration and illusion to achieve a quiet balance. The bird imagery also serves as a metaphor for accessing her inner universe, transforming suffering into a poetic force of healing
childhood into a creative language, making art a pathway for self-healing. “Self-Obliteration” refers to the dissolution of the individual into the boundless universe through infinitely extending imagery, while the repeated layering of “infinity nets” and “polkadots” embodies the inner rhythm of life’s continuous proliferation. Morning (1981) reflects a moment of introspective transition following her return to Japan from New York. The piece combines pastel, ink, and collage, placing a realistic bird silhouette within an oval composition, surrounded by delicate, celllike network patterns. Subtle ink washes create a profound atmosphere, allowing figuration and illusion to achieve a quiet balance. The bird imagery also serves as a metaphor for accessing her inner universe, transforming suffering into a poetic force of healing
Related Info
Modern & Contemporary Art
Ravenel Spring Auction 2026 Taipei
Sunday, May 24, 2026, 1:30pm