The AGO wants an Infinity Mirror Room in its permanent collection but it needs help with the bill - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 06:56 AM | Calgary | -12.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

The AGO wants an Infinity Mirror Room in its permanent collection but it needs help with the bill

More than 165,000 people visited Yayoi Kusama's renowned Infinity Mirror rooms at the AGO during a limited run this year. Now the museum hopes the public will help bring a permanent display to Toronto.

The permanent installation will cost around $2.3 million

Yayoi Kusama, 89, has been a towering figure in the contemporary art world since the 1960s. (Mike Segar/Reuters)

The Art Gallery of Ontariohas launched a crowdfunding campaign to bring one of Yayoi Kusama's signature Infinity Mirror rooms to its permanent collection.

A temporary exhibit by the Japanese artist was a smash hit this past spring, and it seems the AGO is now hoping to mirror the success of the show for infinity, or at least as long as the gallery exists.

"Yayoi Kusama is one of the most important artists alive today. The opportunity to have an Infinity Mirror Room as part of the AGO's collection is deeply exciting," said Stephan Jost, CEO ofthe art gallery.

More than 165,000 people visited Kusama's renowned chambers of illusionduring the show's limited run at the AGO this year. Nearly as many seemed to share selfies from inside the rooms on social media.

A permanent installation would become Kusama's only Infinity Mirror Room at a Canadian public art museum.

To pay for the work, the AGO is making a rare public appeal for help to raise $1.3 million for the display.The gallery has already secured another $1 million through its AGO Foundation.

A woman looks at Yayoi Kusama's "Love Forever," part of the "Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors," exhibition at the AGO in February. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press)

"We want to buy an Infinity room by Kusama for our collection so people can see it," Jost explained in an interview with Metro Morning.

"The problem is, it's really expensive."

The AGO says the campaign is the largest crowdfunding effort ever undertaken by a Canadian art museum in an effort to acquire a contemporary artwork.

What will it look like?

Jost said negotiations with Kusama and her studio have gone well since the spring exhibit, and that the group quickly agreed to sell a permanent work to the AGO.

"It's her call when she gets to sell infinity rooms," Jost said. To date, 17 museums around the world are home to one of the pieces.

While Jost said the AGO knows which specific work will be brought to Toronto, he refused to share those details.

"It's big, I can tell you that," he demurred, before adding that it will be able to fit five people at a time.

Construction of the room is already underway in Japan, Jost said. It would be finished in New York before being brought to Toronto next spring.

A Yayoi Kusama artwork at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Cathy Carver)

The biggest, but not the first

While the AGO acknowledges that crowdfunding is an uncommon practice in the art world, the current campaign isn't the first time Toronto's premier art gallery has asked the public for help in acquiring a new piece.

In 1958, the museum purchased a painting by the Italian Renaissance master Tintoretto through aproto-crowdfunding campaign, in which the gallery offered buyers ownership of one square inch of the painting for $10.

The painting is in the AGO's collection to this day.

"I've always found, when we bet on our public, the public responds," Jost said.

Yayoi Kusama. All the Eternal Love I Have for the Pumpkins, 2016. Wood, mirror, plastic, black glass, LED. Collection of the artist. (Courtesy of the AGO)