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phi foundation

Attention Montrealers! Here's a pop quiz to get you in the back-to-school spirit (no school attendance required): What do a block party, a harvest festival, a charity walk, a car show, and a game night have in common?

If you answered, "They're all free things to do in Montreal this weekend," you get an A+, bragging rights, and free admission to a whole lot of fun weekend events.

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Montreal's Yayoi Kusama exhibit is so popular that the most recent ticket release sold out within minutes. Around 10,000 people applied on July 15, but only half of them received tickets through the box office system and call centre. The PHI Foundation hosting the exhibit is now adapting its ticketing strategy, and even introducing allocated times that don't require reserving tickets at all to help more people see Kusama's works, especially her Infinity Mirrored Rooms.

"We have applied a reasonable increase to the number of people who can go through the exhibit per hour," Cheryl Sim, the curator and managing director at the PHI Foundation for Contemporary Art, told MTL Blog.

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Starting Wednesday, June 15, at 12 p.m., Montrealers can book a reservation to visit the PHI Foundation for Contemporary Art's showcase of works by Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama. The exhibition, titled "DANCING LIGHTS THAT FLEW UP TO THE UNIVERSE," will include three of Kusama's pumpkin sculptures and two of her famous Infinity Mirrored Rooms.

One of the rooms is "filled with hanging light globes that alternate colours before abruptly going dark," the PHI explained in a press release. "The viewer is absorbed into darkness for a moment before the glowing spheres slowly flicker back on, initiating again a cycle akin to life and rebirth."

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Montrealers will soon be able to step into several magical creations by contemporary artist Yayoi Kusama. A new exhibition at the PHI Foundation in Montreal's Old Port will showcase the Japanese pop artist's vibrant paintings and signature bronze pumpkin sculptures, along with two of her world-famous 'Infinity Mirrors.' The illuminated installations will immerse viewers in Kusama's intricate designs, reflected on mirrored walls to create the illusion that they go on forever.

To view the masterpieces, visitors will have to enter a room that's stark and white on the outside, but filled with glowing spheres that illuminate and change colour before abruptly going dark. Viewers are left in darkness for a moment before the hanging globes flicker back on, restarting a cycle that's meant to evoke death and rebirth.

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