By Liz Hobday, Aap
What on earth will the possums make of it?
Wrapping a tree-lined boulevard with the call sign of Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama is certainly a dotty idea.
Along Melbourne’s St Kilda Road outside the National Gallery of Victoria, more than 60 trees were covered in material featuring pink and white dots, an installation titled Ascension of Polka Dots on the Trees.
It’s art, and at the same time an unmissable piece of marketing for Kusama’s blockbuster exhibition at NGV International.
The show is one of the most comprehensive retrospectives of her work presented anywhere in the world, and the biggest ever in Australia.
It features more than 200 artworks including the unveiling of her most recent infinity mirror room, a style of installation Kusama has been known for since the 1960s.
But what do the dots actually mean? For the artist, they represent a path to infinity, but more prosaic interpretations could include a high-vis warning about the plane trees that give Melburnians the sniffles.
The artwork was first installed in Japan in 2002 at the Kirishima Open Air Museum, in a version with red and white fabric covered trees.
While Ascension of Polka Dots on the Trees is free, along with other works including a five-metre high bronze pumpkin sculpture in the NGV foyer, gallery visitors will need to buy tickets to see the main exhibition.
For anyone fond of the animated bird artworks already installed along St Kilda Rd, Julian Opie’s Australian Birds will remain in place, the NGV has confirmed.
And now they’ll really have something to look at.
Yayoi Kusama is on display from 15 December to 21 April at NGV International, St Kilda Road, Melbourne.