Yayoi Kusama // Fireflies, 1999

  • Yayoi Kusama, Fireflies, 1999. Screenprint, 60 × 48 cm, edition of 100. Features Kusama’s rhythmic, luminous dot patterns evoking the flicker of fireflies, combining repetition with vibrant contrasts.
    Fireflies, 1999
    Screenprint, 60 × 48 cm, Edition of 100
    © Yayoi Kusama.
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    Yayoi Kusama’s Fireflies (1999) is a screenprint measuring 60 × 48 cm, produced in an edition of 100. The work captures Kusama’s enduring fascination with natural phenomena, reimagined here through her graphic language of repetition and rhythm. The firefly, a delicate and transient creature, becomes a symbol of light, memory, and infinity within her distinctive visual world.
     
    In this print, the flickering presence of fireflies is transformed into a patterned field, echoing Kusama’s lifelong exploration of dots as metaphors for both the microscopic and the cosmic. The imagery conveys a sense of wonder and transience, suggesting the fleeting beauty of nature while also linking it to her broader themes of self-obliteration and boundless space.
     
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  • “Polka dots are a way to infinity.”

     — Yayoi Kusama

    As with many of her editioned works from the late 1990s, Fireflies demonstrates Kusama’s ability to elevate ephemeral subjects into timeless symbols. The print captures the duality of her practice, where playfulness and profundity coexist, reaffirming her ability to transform simple natural motifs into powerful expressions of obsession and infinity.