Yayoi Kusama // Flowers (PX), 1993

  • Yayoi Kusama, Flowers (PX), 1993. Screenprint on wove paper, 72.5 × 60.3 cm, edition of 90. Depicts Kusama’s bold floral forms rendered in vibrant colour and repetitive pattern, a key motif in her printmaking practice.
    Flowers (PX), 1993
    Screenprint on wove paper, 72.5 × 60.3 cm (28½ × 23¾ in.), Edition of 90
    © Yayoi Kusama. Image reproduced for educational and informational purposes only.
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    Yayoi Kusama’s Flowers (PX) (1993) is a screenprint on wove paper, measuring 725 × 603 mm (28½ × 23¾ in.), produced in an edition of 90. The work highlights Kusama’s longstanding fascination with floral motifs, reinterpreted here through bold outlines, vivid colour, and rhythmic repetition. The print demonstrates her ability to merge the natural and the surreal, presenting the flower as both a symbol of beauty and a vessel of obsession.
     
    In this composition, blossoms expand across the surface with a hypnotic energy, their contours stylised to echo Kusama’s broader visual language of dots, nets, and biomorphic forms. The result is an image that radiates both joy and intensity, reflecting her dual interest in nature’s cycles and the psychological depth of her own imagination.
     
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  • “When I create art, it is an attempt to survive.”
     — Yayoi Kusama
    As with many of her editioned works, Flowers (PX) translates Kusama’s larger artistic themes into a more intimate and accessible format. By capturing the vitality of natural forms within a structured pattern, the print underscores her belief that art can transform even the most familiar subjects into portals of infinity.