My son just loves art and has been taking art lessons for a few years now. We love to take him out to art galleries and museums wherever we can and there’s always something to see and do in London. A few years ago we went to Yayoi Kasuma’s Infinity Mirrored Room which was an amazing experience. So when I heard about Obliteration Room at Tate Modern I knew we had to go.
Exploring the Obliteration Room with kids
Tate Modern is currently showing two of Yayoi Kasuma’s Infinity Mirror Rooms. These immersive installations will transport you into Kusama’s unique vision of endless reflections. General tickets have been sold out for months so we were glad we saw them in a smaller venue a few years ago.
However, you can just turn up and visit Yayoi Kasuma’s Obliteration Room at Tate Modern for free! The Obliteration Room is an entirely white space in the Turbine Hall, furnished as a monochrome living room, which is ‘obliterated’ with multi-coloured stickers. We had to queue for about 20 minutes and then a group of us were each given a sheet of round, colourful, stickers and allowed into The Obliteration Rooms.
It looked pretty crazy, everything had been covered with stickers – the walls, furniture, even the floor.
It felt a little like walking into Ikea as we recognised the shelving units from ones we have at home!
Everything was covered. It must have looked amazing when it was new and white.
It was quite busy but once you were in the installation you could stay as long as you liked.
Some people had made faces or their names with the stickers. Most stickers were just randomly placed. We tried hard to find places where there weren’t many stickers, mainly underneath surfaces.
We were told that we couldn’t take the sticker sheets home as they were part of the art work. So we made sure to stick our stickers everywhere and placed the sheet in the bin on the way out. It was a crazy experience but fun!
Yayoi Kasuma’s Obliteration Room at Tate Modern is open until the 29th August – visit while you can!
You may be interested in our other posts:
5 Comments
Kacie Morgan
August 15, 2022 at 9:05 amOh wow, this sounds amazing. Even as an adult, I’d very much like to go here myself!
Rhian Westbury
August 15, 2022 at 9:46 amI’ve never heard of this exhibition but it looks so fun. A nice interactive art exhibition, but the coloured stickers look so cool x
Kim Carberry
August 15, 2022 at 3:16 pmAhh! I saw someone had visited here on TikTok and it looks so cool. How interesting. x
Exploring Sky Garden with kids - the-gingerbread-house.co.uk
August 18, 2022 at 9:26 pm[…] Yayoi Kasuma’s Obliteration Room at Tate Modern […]
Horrible Histories: Terrible Tudors {review} - the-gingerbread-house.co.uk
April 22, 2023 at 8:14 am[…] Horrible Histories shows are recommended for ages 5 to 105 (106 year olds may not like them!). It’s a great show for the whole family and great entertainment for the school holidays if you’re in London. We combined our trip to the theatre with a trip on the new Elizabeth Line and The Obliteration Room at Tate Modern! […]