Tuesday, August 18, 2015
Better Late Than Never: Yoko Ono at the MoMA
John Lennon liked to joke that Yoko Ono was “the world’s most famous unknown artist.” Before she infamously “broke up the Beatles” (but not really), Ono built an internationally recognized career as an artist in the developing fields of Conceptual art, experimental film, and performance art.
Unfairly famous then and now for all the wrong reasons, Ono’s long
fought in her own humorously sly way for recognition, beginning with her
self-staged 1971 “show” Museum of Modern (F)art, a performance piece in which she dreamed of a one-woman exhibition of her work at the Museum of Modern Art, New York. Now, more than 40 years later, the MoMA makes that dream come true with the exhibition Yoko Ono: One Woman Show, 1960–1971.
Better late than never, this exhibition of the pre-Lennon and
early-Lennon Ono establishes her not just as the world’s most famous
unknown artist, but the most unfairly unknown one, too. Please come over to Picture This at Big Think to read more of "Better Late Than Never: Yoko Ono at the MoMA."
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1 comment:
I'm a huge fan of Yoko Ono. I find her a true artist. Her versatile personality makes her stand out and even at this age, she hasn't quit working for different causes, apart from art.
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