![]() It is this imaginative use of language that paved the way for the first wave of conceptual artists, including Lawrence Weiner and Sol LeWitt, to materialize in the 1960s. The original Grapefruit manuscript is further bestrewn with handwritten notes, reflecting Ono’s whimsy. Sometimes they were informed of it but mostly not.” The list that follows contains the names of fellow artists, friends, and Fluxus components, from George Maciunas to Robert Rauschenberg, to Isamu Noguchi, to Peggy Guggenheim, revealing the array of individuals who inspired Yoko and consorted within her closest social circle. Brecht’s scores confound the boundaries between text and physical performance, while Yoko Ono’s provoke a more cerebral, illusory performance.Īn introductory card from original manuscript reads, “ Some of my pieces were dedicated to the following people. George Maciunas’s portrait of Yoko Ono, 1961Īlthough Yoko Ono’s instruction pieces-some of which were assembled during a brief stay in a sanatorium in Japan following the dissolution of her first marriage-reflect the same format as the Fluxus event scores pioneered by George Brecht, they occupy a separate poetic and imaginative dimension. It was these performances that drew the attention of George Maciunas, who offered Yoko Ono a solo exhibition of her “Instruction Paintings” at his short-lived AG Gallery, located at 925 Madison Avenue, in the summer of 1961. ![]() These event scores became a key artistic praxis of Fluxus, with numerous artists offering their own interpretations of the medium, including the likes of Ken Friedman and Allison Knowles.īy the end of 1960, Yoko Ono and La Monte Young had begun to host performances featuring emerging avant-garde artists in Yoko Ono’s Chambers St. Similar to a musical score, event scores could be performed and reinterpreted by anyone. The idea, which recall Happenings with less theatricality, was to highlight facets of everyday life-and more conceptually, critique traditional artistic representation. To perform Brecht’s 1961 piece EXIT for instance, one would simply exit a doorway. Dig a hole in your garden to put them in.” ( Cloud Piece, 1963) This format, which became a crucial precursor to conceptualism, emerged from the event scores by artists attending John Cage’s Experimental Music Composition classes at the New School in New York-in particular, George Brecht and La Monte Young.Įvent scores, invented by George Brecht, are simple directives to complete mundane tasks. Assembled into an artist’s book and originally published in Tokyo in a limited edition of 500 (Simon and Schuster would release a mass market edition in 1970), the small, rectilinear cards each contain simple, hand-typed instructions, such as “ Imagine the clouds dripping. Use such color to tint your absent thoughts.Yoko Ono’s Grapefruit original manuscript on view for the first time, Stendhal Gallery, 2009ġ50 pieces comprise the original manuscript of Yoko Ono’s pivotal 1964 work Grapefruit. The color that only happens when movementsĬut the air in a certain way and go immediately. The color like a remaining stain of illusion Itself but only when it is casted between ![]() Rose color with a glitter and softness that Rat colors with faint hairly smells and paleĭark spots like those on a transparent sheet Sense of smell, anticipation, senses that No matter how close we get to each other,Īccording to the map, make one by putting ![]() It’s sad that the air is the only thing we share. Here’s just a small taste of this immensely delightful tiny treasure:Ī dream you dream alone may be a dream, but a dream two people dream together is a reality. More than thirty years later, Grapefruit: A Book of Instructions and Drawings by Yoko Ono ( public library) - part irreverent activity book for grown-ups, part subversive philosophy for life - was republished, with a new introduction by Ono herself. In 1964, more than a decade after the publication of her tender story An Invisible Flower, Yoko Ono collected a selection of her poetic meditations on life in a small but whimsical book published in Tokyo in a limited edition of 500.
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