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Final, hard-to-get tickets for the 'Infinity Mirrors' exhibit at the High Museum to be released

The exhibit has been sold out for months, but you have a chance to see it during its final week in Atlanta.

ATLANTA — It has been the hardest ticket to come by in Atlanta for months. And no, we're not talking about the Super Bowl.

The touring exhibition, Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors, at the High Museum of Art has been sold out since last September.

More than 120,000 advance tickets were sold back then, but the High reserved the final week in case of inclement weather. 

The High says they plan to release tickets for any unneeded inclement weather days during the final week -- Feb. 11 through Feb. 17 -- online on Tuesday, Feb. 5, beginning at 10 a.m.

RELATED | Infinity Mirrors tour coming to Atlanta: How to get tickets

MORE | Infinity Mirrors tour at the High Museum SOLD OUT (But you still have a chance to see it!)

The only place to purchase those tickets will be online at the High Museum's website -- they will not be available by phone or in person at the museum.

Due to the unique nature of this exhibition, all tickets will be issued for specific time slots.

Ticket prices are as follows:

$29 for visitors ages 6 and over

$5 for visitors ages 5 and under (purchase may include up to two tickets from this category)

  • Maximum six tickets per purchase
  • All visitors -- INCLUDING INFANTS -- must have a timed ticket
  • One adult must accompany every two children (ages 12 and under)

VIP Tickets:

VIP Tickets are $175 each and includes an exhibition catalogue and special viewing hours.

  • VIP hours are scheduled for Feb. 12 through Feb. 17 (Tuesday through Sunday) from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m.

PLEASE NOTE:

  • Same day, walk-up tickets will not be sold from Feb. 11 through Feb. 17. All tickets for those days must be purchased in advance online.
  • In the event of closure due to inclement weather from Feb. 11 through Feb. 17, refunds will be issued to the original ticket purchaser.

Spanning the entire second floor of the High’s Wieland Pavilion, “Infinity Mirrors” takes visitors on a once-in-a-lifetime journey through more than 60 years of Kusama’s creative genius, focusing on the evolution of her iconic kaleidoscopic environments called Infinity Mirror Rooms. 

The exhibition features six of the rooms as well as additional large-scale installations, sculptures, paintings, works on paper, archival photographs and films from the early 1950s through the present. 

The 89-year-old artist, who is regarded as one of the most influential artists of the 20th century, is still very active in her Tokyo studio.

The Infinity Mirrors exhibition and tour has been organized by the Smithsonian Institution's Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington.

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