Berliner Boersenzeitung - London exhibition celebrates 'unknown artist' Yoko Ono

EUR -
AED 3.854833
AFN 70.842978
ALL 98.075677
AMD 407.604571
ANG 1.885958
AOA 957.143769
ARS 1057.093376
AUD 1.620899
AWG 1.891723
AZN 1.780812
BAM 1.94671
BBD 2.112785
BDT 125.046132
BGN 1.957086
BHD 0.395588
BIF 3038.30149
BMD 1.0495
BND 1.408994
BOB 7.231373
BRL 6.09738
BSD 1.046384
BTN 88.205468
BWP 14.276611
BYN 3.424545
BYR 20570.19316
BZD 2.109371
CAD 1.474657
CDF 3013.113308
CHF 0.929573
CLF 0.037178
CLP 1025.854536
CNY 7.611024
CNH 7.614136
COP 4620.946964
CRC 534.688137
CUC 1.0495
CUP 27.811741
CVE 110.905837
CZK 25.276517
DJF 186.51722
DKK 7.458647
DOP 63.497795
DZD 140.238373
EGP 52.086037
ERN 15.742495
ETB 129.560857
FJD 2.389133
FKP 0.828388
GBP 0.83452
GEL 2.865435
GGP 0.828388
GHS 16.474638
GIP 0.828388
GMD 74.514077
GNF 9057.182336
GTQ 8.076137
GYD 218.923625
HKD 8.167831
HNL 26.473615
HRK 7.486353
HTG 137.338083
HUF 410.810368
IDR 16706.460195
ILS 3.824209
IMP 0.828388
INR 88.513069
IQD 1375.369293
IRR 44170.817668
ISK 145.104175
JEP 0.828388
JMD 165.238465
JOD 0.744408
JPY 160.427543
KES 135.913134
KGS 91.122843
KHR 4250.473525
KMF 492.162793
KPW 944.549288
KRW 1464.372094
KWD 0.32291
KYD 0.872045
KZT 522.490418
LAK 23052.260115
LBP 93982.693723
LKR 304.721381
LRD 188.726248
LSL 18.933171
LTL 3.0989
LVL 0.634832
LYD 5.137341
MAD 10.530153
MDL 19.12407
MGA 4910.608977
MKD 61.565484
MMK 3408.733928
MNT 3566.199758
MOP 8.387994
MRU 41.890784
MUR 49.148227
MVR 16.214668
MWK 1821.931462
MXN 21.690641
MYR 4.677089
MZN 67.071194
NAD 18.932901
NGN 1776.036553
NIO 38.579727
NOK 11.69151
NPR 141.128351
NZD 1.797468
OMR 0.40405
PAB 1.046424
PEN 3.965272
PGK 4.166377
PHP 61.885324
PKR 291.498726
PLN 4.307694
PYG 8166.02661
QAR 3.820808
RON 4.97683
RSD 116.993003
RUB 110.720688
RWF 1438.864022
SAR 3.943084
SBD 8.805922
SCR 13.772279
SDG 631.27191
SEK 11.53176
SGD 1.411976
SHP 0.828388
SLE 23.826447
SLL 22007.487903
SOS 599.792459
SRD 37.157507
STD 21722.523845
SVC 9.156247
SYP 2636.899209
SZL 18.933076
THB 36.410294
TJS 11.181299
TMT 3.683744
TND 3.324028
TOP 2.458031
TRY 36.374397
TTD 7.114847
TWD 34.024847
TZS 2775.926352
UAH 43.478489
UGX 3876.934664
USD 1.0495
UYU 44.591791
UZS 13465.080764
VES 49.006494
VND 26673.033631
VUV 124.598708
WST 2.929774
XAF 652.920809
XAG 0.0345
XAU 0.000399
XCD 2.836325
XDR 0.800447
XOF 658.559065
XPF 119.331742
YER 262.296216
ZAR 19.09328
ZMK 9446.766437
ZMW 28.855542
ZWL 337.938459
  • RBGPF

    0.8100

    61

    +1.33%

  • RELX

    0.2400

    46.81

    +0.51%

  • NGG

    -0.4300

    62.83

    -0.68%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    8.86

    -0.56%

  • CMSD

    -0.1500

    24.43

    -0.61%

  • RIO

    -0.9500

    62.03

    -1.53%

  • SCS

    -0.1800

    13.54

    -1.33%

  • CMSC

    -0.1600

    24.57

    -0.65%

  • BCE

    -0.3900

    26.63

    -1.46%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    6.8

    +0.44%

  • BCC

    -4.0900

    148.41

    -2.76%

  • JRI

    -0.1300

    13.24

    -0.98%

  • GSK

    -0.1300

    34.02

    -0.38%

  • BTI

    0.3800

    37.71

    +1.01%

  • BP

    -0.3600

    28.96

    -1.24%

  • AZN

    -0.0400

    66.36

    -0.06%

London exhibition celebrates 'unknown artist' Yoko Ono
London exhibition celebrates 'unknown artist' Yoko Ono / Photo: Daniel LEAL - AFP

London exhibition celebrates 'unknown artist' Yoko Ono

She is the world's most famous unknown artist -- everyone knows her name, but no one knows what she does, John Lennon once said of the perceived disregard for his wife Yoko Ono, who turns 91 on Sunday.

Text size:

From Thursday, Ono's impact on conceptual art will be on display in a retrospective exhibition at the Tate Modern in London.

The "Music of the Mind" show, which runs until September 1, explores the multi-disciplinary works of a woman more famed for being the murdered Beatle's wife than a conceptual art icon.

"This exhibition is a true celebration of Yoko as an artist," one of the exhibition's curators, Andrew de Brun, told AFP.

"Indeed, John Lennon was a very important collaborator for her, but we are very happy to be able to showcase her art."

- Two hundred works -

Spanning seven decades, the exhibition presents a detailed exploration of Ono's artistic legacy through 200 pieces, including installations, objects, videos, photographs, sculptures and documents detailing her performances and musical compositions.

"We recognise the importance of Yoko Ono in contemporary art and culture," de Brun said of the retrospective, which the curators say is the most extensive ever done in Britain about Ono.

"By displaying some of her works, we help to showcase the significant place she occupies.

"We are pleased to present her work to new generations of visitors... showing her activism, her campaigns for peace," the curator added.

Since her initial exhibitions in New York during the 1950s, Ono has been a proponent of conceptualism -- an art movement that posits the concept or idea behind an artwork is more important than the physical piece.

The exhibition examines some of the artist's most controversial works or performances, such as the video of "Cut Piece", a work she first presented in Japan and then in 1965 at Carnegie Recital Hall in New York.

On stage, Ono appeared in a black dress and left scissors beside her, allowing the audience to cut off her clothing in an exhibit aimed at drawing attention to the violence society inflicts on women.

The exhibition appears as a vindication of the artist's epic journey, after decades of being blamed by some for the breakup of The Beatles in 1970.

- Meeting John Lennon -

Ono's conceptual art installations at London's Indica Gallery in 1967 captivated Lennon.

On that occasion, a work called "Ceiling Painting" invited visitors to climb a ladder and view through a magnifying glass the word "yes" that appeared on the ceiling.

Lennon climbed the ladder and was amazed by the work, which is now being exhibited in London.

"When Hammer A Nail painting was exhibited at Indica Gallery, a person came to me and asked if it was alright to hammer a nail in the painting," Ono recalled in her text "Some Notes on the Lisson Gallery Show".

"I said it was alright if he pays five shillings.

"Instead of paying five shillings, he asked if it was alright for him to hammer an imaginary nail in. That was John Lennon."

Ono and Lennon married in 1969 and remained together until his murder in New York in 1980 at the age of 40.

In their 13 years together, the couple released six albums and created experimental music recordings, short films, performances and installations.

With Lennon, the Tokyo-born artist achieved acclaim in music, a topic that the London exhibition also explores.

The couple's 1980 release "Double Fantasy", recorded before Lennon's death, won the Grammy Award for Album of the Year.

"When I hear music, my body just starts to move," Ono said in an interview in 2013.

"That's just me. That's just my body. And I was like that as a child, too."

(G.Gruner--BBZ)