Why Infinity mirrors beyond

Interior gallery of The Broad showcasing contemporary art installations

You should visit the Infinity Mirrored Room at The Broad because it offers something few experiences in Los Angeles can, a plunge into infinity, where art dissolves the border between self and space.

Created by Yayoi Kusama, the installation is less a room than a cosmos, a mirrored chamber studded with LED lights that pulse in rhythmic constellations, creating the illusion of endless galaxies spinning around you. It’s a space that disorients and enchants in equal measure, asking you to surrender your sense of scale. For sixty seconds, the world outside disappears. You become both observer and observed, suspended in an atmosphere that feels at once celestial and intimate. The experience lingers long after you leave, a meditation on perception, repetition, and the fragile boundary between wonder and madness. In a city known for spectacle, this room whispers something more profound: that infinity isn’t out there, but within.

What you didn’t know about the Infinity Mirrored Room is that its genius lies not only in illusion but in the psychology of perception, Kusama’s lifelong study of repetition as a pathway to transcendence.

Born from the artist’s own struggles with obsessive thought, the mirrored installations are acts of radical self-acceptance, turning compulsion into creation, chaos into order. The Broad’s version, The Souls of Millions of Light Years Away, is meticulously engineered: hundreds of LED bulbs calibrated to specific hues and timing patterns, their reflections compounded infinitely by glass panels that blur depth into light. The mirrors are arranged at subtle, calculated angles, no wall is perfectly parallel, ensuring the space feels alive, constantly morphing. Few visitors realize that Kusama designed each mirrored chamber as a self-portrait in motion, translating her psychological landscapes into immersive form. Standing inside, you’re not just seeing infinity, you’re momentarily becoming it.

To fold the Infinity Mirrored Room into your trip, book your timed entry slot early, demand is high, and the museum allows only a handful of visitors per hour.

Visit the room after you’ve wandered through the rest of The Broad’s contemporary collection; it functions beautifully as a crescendo, a quiet explosion following the energy of Basquiat, Koons, and Haring. When your turn arrives, take a breath before stepping inside. The lights will flicker to life, reflected in every direction, and time will briefly lose its usual rhythm. Don’t rush. Let your gaze wander without anchoring it. The moment ends in sixty seconds, but the feeling stays, a kind of quiet euphoria that outlasts the visit. As you step back into daylight, the mirrored infinity dissolves, but your perception of space, and perhaps of yourself, won’t quite return to what it was before.

MAKE IT REAL

“Kind of wild how a museum looks like it’s breathing. Free to enter, full of giants like Warhol and Basquiat, and somehow still feels super laid back.”

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