The title of the artwork that caught my eye during my visit to the MoMA was entitled “Accumulation of Nets (No. 7)” and it was created in 1962 by Yayoi Kusama who is a Japanese artist. This piece is a part of MoMA’s exhibit entitled “Making Space: Women Artists and Postwar Abstraction” which focuses on the works of woman artists from the end of WWII to the beginning of the feminist movement. This particular piece caught my eye because the composition of it seemed so intriguing to me. Even though the piece is composed of several prints, it appears to have varying textures when you look at it from afar. When I looked up how Kusama created this piece, I actually found out that she first would make a painting and the photograph it, and then cut up the black and white prints and put them into a grid layout. I think this style of painting and photography is pretty unique and helps create a new medium for the viewers to see the artwork. The work is very multidimensional and I like how it is in the monochrome color scheme because it really brings each of the differing patterns to light. Every single square in this artwork has its own unique pattern and to me it resembles a quilt of some sort. Each of these individual pieces which are a part of this artwork have their own distinctive story. By combining all of these differing patterns together, Kusama was able to create a collection of these individual stories.