Courtesy of the artistArt & PhotographyNewsArt & Photography / NewsYayoi Kusama will debut a new, outdoor infinity room in New YorkThe ever-changing installation will feature in her much-anticipated New York Botanical Garden showShareLink copied ✔️January 19, 2020January 19, 2020TextThom Waite The date for the opening of Yayoi Kusama’s first-of-its-kind New York Botanical Garden show, announced last year, draws ever closer. And, as the months tick down to the May opening, we’ve been offered some more insight into what visitors will get to experience. Kusama’s works from past and present will be distributed through the 250-acre grounds, meaning it might be quite a stretch to take them all in, if you don’t have all day (though polka dot fabric-wrapped trees will help direct visitors). This also means that there are some highlights to make sure you don’t miss, including a mysteriously-titled “obliteration greenhouse” and, yes, another new Infinity Room. More specifically, one adapted for the outdoors, which will change according to the lighting conditions (which, frankly, sounds amazing and as instagrammable as ever). Of course, there will also be floral installations – this is the Botanical Garden, after all – in-keeping with Kusama’s continued interest in nature throughout her career as an artist. These will serve as a backdrop for her art – a new, huge pumpkin sculpture, for example – but will also try to recreate past artworks, such as Alone, Buried In A Flower Garden (2014), in flowers. Alone, Buried In A Flower Garden (2014)Courtesy of Ota Fine Arts, Victoria Miro, and David Zwirner. Work Kusama created as a teenager in Japan will also be on display for the first time. This will include the sketchbooks she filled with drawings of peonies (a careful, repetitive practice that partly stems from national and personal trauma, according to 2018’s documentary on her life, and has definitely informed her later creations). The New York Botanical Garden Yayoi Kusama exhibition will be open May 9 – November 1, 2020. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREThese photos explore the ‘human, tender, gritty truths’ behind kinkThis zine shines a light on the shadows of Brighton’s teenagersVCARBMeet the young creatives VCARB is getting into F1In pictures: The playful worlds of Tokyo’s young subculturesDavide Sorrenti’s journals document the origins of 90s heroin chicMartin Parr on capturing the strangeness of Britain and its peopleIn pictures: The changing face of China’s underground club sceneFrom the grotesque to the sublime, what to see at Art Basel Miami BeachThese photos show a ‘profoundly hopeful’ side to rainforest lifeThe most loved photo stories from November 2025Catherine Opie on the story of her legendary Dyke DeckArt shows to leave the house for in December 2025