Mirror, mirror on the wall. Who’s the got the most viral art of them all?

Why, Yayoi Kusama, of course. The Japanese contemporary artist’s Infinity Mirrors exhibit drew unprecedented demand (and selfies) during its run earlier this year at the Art Gallery of Ontario, which is one reason why the institution is currently running a crowdfunding campaign to buy a room that will become a permanent part of the collection. With one week — and more than $900,000 — left to go, the AGO has revealed the name and what the potential addition will look like.

Called Infinity Mirror Room — Let’s Survive Forever, the piece features mirrored walls and reflective stainless steel balls on the ground and suspended from the ceiling. It also has a mirrored pillar in the centre, which has been described as “an infinity room inside an infinity room,” and when patrons get close to it, it creates one of the artist’s well known kaleidoscopic visual effects. It is larger than many of the artist’s other infinity rooms, able to fit up to four patrons at a time.

The AGO’s installation will be one of three editions of Let’s Survive Forever. One was shown in New York at the David Zwirner Gallery last November, and there is another on display in Chicago at the wndr museum, which is on loan from a private collection.

The AGO Foundation has already secured the funding for half of the cost of the piece, and announced the crowdfunding campaign to raise the remaining funds a month ago. So far, over 3,000 people have already contributed just over $365,000 of the campaign’s $1.3 million goal.

In an interview with the Star last week, the gallery’s director and CEO Stephan Jost said, “We’re going to get the piece; it’s too important not to.” He said he was confident that the AGO’s donor base would help it reach its goal. “My guess is at the end there will be gifts to support it,” he said.