YOKO ONO : FROM MY WINDOW

オノ・ヨーコ|私の窓から

For sixty years, Yoko Ono (1933-) has freely worked across fields, connecting things that are different and producing new creative circuits among people and media. Although Ono has usually been discussed in the context of post-war American art, this exhibition will place her art in the context of her native Tokyo. Through materials documenting her early pieces, artworks she created in Tokyo in the 1950s, '60s and '70s, and recent works and installations, it will reveal how Ono's activities connect modern and contemporary; Europe, Japan, and the United States; art and music and literature; avant-garde and popular culture; and society and the individual.

As a pioneer of conceptual art that took her distinctive method of the use of words and language as its nucleus, Ono at times turned people's attention to serious issues using humor and other strategies. This exhibition will offer an excellent opportunity to look back from our perspective today at Yoko Ono's development in a remarkably international environment in Tokyo.

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Yoko Ono, FROM MY WINDOW: Salem 1692, 2002, Pigment on stretched canvas, Private Collection
©YOKO ONO 2015

Highlights of the Exhibition

■ In the 1930s, Ono received an education in music at Jiyu Gakuen kindergarten. There, she had contact with thinking that recognized no distinction between art and life, such as in composing music on the basis of a clock's ticking and other everyday sounds. This was many years before her contact with American music trends in the 1950s and '60s. The exhibition will show the experiences shaping Ono's youthful sensibilities before she embarked on an art career, as well as artworks she undertook in her teens.

■Grapefruit, one of Ono's greatest works, and a profoundly important book in conceptual art history, was published in the summer of 1964 as the culmination of two and half years of residence in Tokyo. This exhibition will display twenty-two of the original INSTRUCTIONS FOR PAINTINGS first shown in Ono's landmark one-day exhibition and performance at the Sogetsu Art Center on May 24, 1962. It will also show for the first time in Japan, thirty-nine of the photostat positives and negatives of the original INSTRUCTIONS FOR PAINTINGS exhibited at the Sogetsu Art Center in 1962, which carried this process of removing oneself from the mark of the original to a new idea of the original, which is one of the important bases of concept art. Also for the first time ever shown in Japan are Ono's typewritten drafts of works, many of which are published in Grapefruit. Finally, the exhibition will include the museum's own copy of the rare 1964 first edition of Grapefruit, making clear the character of Ono's new art--which uses short stanzas to rouse the reader to imaginative thinking and action, much like a music score, demonstrating the process which she developed in Tokyo.

■In the 1960s, Ono began to confront social issues, such as her and John Lennon's "WAR IS OVER!" peace campaign of late 1969 for which Hibiya Outdoor Concert Hall became a venue in Tokyo, and her participation in the 1974 "One Step Festival" (Koriyama) which proclaimed an environmental theme. To broadly disseminate her message, she not only produced conceptual art employing advertising media but also adopted popular music methods, such as outdoor concerts and records. In recent years, she has produced artworks and songs dealing with violence. These creations serve to intersect Ono's individual experiences of violence with the memory of violence many people possess.

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Photo: Daisuke Yamashiro

ダウンロード.pngStill photography of Bag Piece, Touch Piece, Voice Piece for Soprano for Simone Morris, Painting to Shake Hands, Cloud Piece, and in the ATRIUM is permitted in under the following policies:

-Please refrain from using flash or tripods.
-Photography for commercial use is not permitted.
-Videotaping is not permitted.
-Please refrain from photographing other visitors, as it may infringe of their portrait rights.
-The photographer will bear full responsibility concerning the use of photographs.
Neither the museum nor artist will bear any responsibility whatsoever.
-You cannot take pictures in the ATRIUM of works with the No Photo Sign.
*Concerning photography for news coverage, please contact the museum for permission.


Organized by

Tokyo Metropolitan Foundation for History and Culture, Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo

Institutional Sponsorship by

The Japan World Exposition 1970 Commemorative Fund

Sponsored by

SHISEIDO.jpg

In cooperation with

JAPAN AIRLINES

YOKO ONO

1933 
Born in Tokyo. Spent her childhood in Tokyo, New York and San Francisco and returned to Japan before the World WarII broke.

1952 
Enrolled in Department of Philosophy, Gakushuin University. Soon after Ono moved to New York with her Family, studied Poetry and Music at Sarah Lawrence College, New York.

1960 
Organized with La Monte Young a series of concerts at her Chambers Street loft, New York. 

1961 
Her first solo exhibition was held at the AG Gallery, New York and her first solo concert was held at the Carnegie Recital Hall, New York.

1962 
Moved to Tokyo. At the Sogetsu Kaikan Hall, Tokyo, Ono presented several events and exhibited her Instructions for Paintings in the lobby.

1964 
Had a number of events at Naiqua Gallery, Tokyo and other places. Published Grapefruit. After making presentation of Cut Piece, Bag Piece and several other works in Kyoto at the Yamaichi Hall and in Tokyo at the Sogetsu Kaikan Hall, Ono returned to New York.

1966 
In London, Ono held solo exhibitions at the Indica Gallery, then next year at the Lisson Gallery, and made a second version of Film No. 4 (Bottoms).

1969 
Together with John Lennon, Ono launched poster and billboard campaign War Is Over! in 12 cities worldwide,including Tokyo.

1971 
Held a solo exhibition This is Not Here at Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, New York.

1974 
Returned to Japan to participate in an open air concert One Step Festival, Koriyama, Fukushima Prefecture, with Plastic Ono Super Band, also had solo concerts in Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya and Hiroshima.

1980 
Released Double Fantasy in collaboration with Lennon.

1989 
Held a solo exhibition Objects, Films, at Whitney Museum, New York.

1993
Held a solo exhibition Endangered Species 2319-2322, at Spiral, Tokyo.

2000 
A retrospective exhibition Yes Yoko Ono was held in Japan Society, New York and toured North America, Korea and Japan.

2003 
On the occasion of Ono's solo exhibition at Musée d'Art moderne de la Ville de Paris, performed Cut Piece for the
first time in 40 years.

2005
Permanent Installation, SKY TV for Hokkaido in Tokachi Millennium Forest, Hokkaido

2007 
Created Imagine Peace Tower, Reykjavik, Iceland.

2009 
Awarded Venice Biennale Golden Lion. Ono founded Courage Awards for the Arts to reward the contributors in the art field.

2011
Awarded the 8th Hiroshima Art Prize and held a solo exhibition The Road of Hope.

2015 
Solo exhibition Yoko Ono: One Woman Show, 1960-1971 was held at Museum of Modern Art, New York.

Information

Period

Nov 8 (sun) 2015- Feb 14 (sun) 2016

Closed on

Mondays (except 11/23, 1/11.2016), 11/24, 12/28-1/1.2016, 1/12

Venue

Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo (MOT) Exhibition Gallery B2F

Opening Hours

10:00-18:00
*Last admission to the gallery floor & last ticket purchase is 30minutes before the closing hour.

Admission

Adults: ¥1,200
University Students, Over 65: ¥900
High School & Junior High Students: ¥700
Elementary School & Under: Free
*Free entry to MOT collection ticket holders

Access

From Kiyosumi-Shirakawa Station on the Hanzomon Line: 9min. walk from the B2 exit.
From Kiyosumi-Shirakawa Station on the Toei Oedo Line: 13min. walk from the A3 exit.

Inquiry

+81-3-5245-4111(General Information)
+81-3-5405-8686(Hello Dial)

Exhibiotion Catalogue

YOKO ONO: FROM MY WINDOW
¥2,250
SOLD OUT

Also Showing


Tokyo Art Meeting (Ⅵ)
"TOKYO"-Sensing the Cultural Magma of the Metropolis

Nov 7 (sat) 2015- Feb 14 (sun) 2016

MOT
Collection

Nov 7 (sat) 2015- Feb 14 (sun) 2016


Concurrent Exhibition

See Exhibitions

Past Exhibitions