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Amid a global plastic-pollution crisis, artist Erik Jon Olson turns his own plastic waste into quilted works of art in which ...
Filipino Japanophiles share their Tokyo top threes—from kamatoro that melts like oceanic butter to Yoko Ono’s art that cuts ...
I did feel that the day was going to come eventually, but it’s not a song I ever wanted to sing,” Julian Lennon told me in ...
Don’t judge an album by its cover... Easier said than done for some. Following the controversy surrounding the album image ...
Cut Piece feels like that. Yoko Ono instructed the audience to cut pieces of clothing from her body. She was left in her underwear, sitting in the seiza position, which is used for formal settings.
Had she never met John Lennon, Yoko Ono would still be an essential figure in conceptual and performance art history. She didn't need his spotlight, which if anything made her work harder to see.
See all 51 stories. BIOGRAPHY Yoko David Sheff Simon & Schuster, $49.99 In September 1980 David Sheff spent three weeks in New York interviewing John Lennon and Yoko Ono for Playboy magazine.
A new solo exhibition dedicated to Yoko Ono is coming to the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago next fall, according to an announcement Monday. “Yoko Ono: Music of the Mind” will open in ...
The critically acclaimed Yoko Ono retrospective that generated large crowds at Tate Modern last year will open in October at the Museum of Contemporary Art (MCA) Chicago, its only presentation in ...
Her most famous exhibit was “Cut Piece,” which found Ono sitting cross-legged on stage as she invited the audience to come up and cut off pieces of her clothing with scissors.
The groupies were everywhere, but Yoko Ono was not one of them. It was Nov. 7, 1966, when she met John Lennon for the first time. He and the Beatles were about to start making “Sgt. Pepper’s ...