As we previously reported, the Hirshhorn plans a major retrospective of Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama next February.

Yesterday, the gallery announced that the show is going on the road.

After opening at the Hirshhorn on Feb. 23, 2017, “Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors” will head west to the the Seattle Art Museum (June 30-Sept. 10, 2017) and Los Angeles’ The Broad (Oct. 2017-Jan. 2018) before swinging through Canada at the Art Gallery of Ontario (March—May 2018), and concluding its tour at the Cleveland Museum of Art (July-Oct. 2018).

The artist has drawn huge crowds in LA and New York in the last few years. In 2008, Washington residents had the chance to experience her wildly colorful installations in a more intimate and relatively less trafficked venue when the Kennedy Center atrium hosted an installation of Kusama’s Dots Obsession – Day and Dots Obsession – Night.

But the explosion of social media and selfie-taking gallery patrons will make the Hirshhorn show an altogether different experience. Last year The Huffington Post suggested that Kusama “invented the photo-friendly art show,” and while some critics see that as a bad thing, don’t hold it against Kusama.

Now 87, Kusama still has a childlike wonder, as evident in the title of a work that will be making its institutional premiere at the Hirshhorn: “All the Eternal Love I have for Pumpkins.”