The "Late-Night Chat is filled with Dreams" mug set by Yayoi Kusama features a bone china mug in blue and black, showcasing an abstract design of faces, eyes, and geometric patterns. This mug includes a handle on the right side.

Yayoi Kusama

Late-Night Chat is filled with Dreams Mug Set

£60

A set of two bone china mugs designed in collaboration with avant-garde artist Yayoi Kusama. 

Dimensions

Mug size: 10.2 x 7.2 cm.

Finishing

Bone China

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    The "Late-Night Chat is filled with Dreams" mug set by Yayoi Kusama features a bone china mug in blue and black, showcasing an abstract design of faces, eyes, and geometric patterns. This mug includes a handle on the right side.

    Courtesy the artist and Victoria Miro

    About The Artwork

    Set of two bone china mugs featuring a wrap-print of Yayoi Kusama’s artwork Late Night Chat is Filled with Dreams, ideal for sipping with a friend during your own late night chat. Late Night Chat is Filled with Dreams, 2009, which was exhibited at Tate Modern, features the artist’s distinctive polka dots motif and repeated faces. These are often read as part of Kusama’s artistic attempts to recreate her experiences of hallucinations.

    About Yayoi Kusama

    Yayoi Kusama (b.1929) is a highly influential Japanese artist. She is best known for her immersive installations, the Infinity Mirror Rooms, and her iconic polka-dot paintings. With a practice based in conceptual art, Kusama’s work spans medium with ease: travelling across painting, installation, performance, video art, fashion, and text. A pioneer in feminist pop art, Kusama’s work is concerned with autobiography, sexuality, and the contemporary psychological condition.

    Kusama is considered one of today’s most important conceptual artists and has exhibited extensively on an international basis. Her work has been collected by institutions worldwide including National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo; Museum of Modern Art, New York City; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles; Tate, London; Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, and Centre Pompidou, Paris, among many others.

    She is represented by David Zwirner, Ota Fine Arts, and Victoria Miro.