View allAll Photos Tagged yokoono

That's Yoko Ono that is, in a still from a very nasty and degrading film (don't all rush at once, and I only saw the trailer, y'know what that means), by the exploitation madame and mister of sleaze Roberta and Michael Findlay, who also gave us edifying classics as The Sin Syndicate and later "Snuff". This look slike it could have been an inspiration for Last House on the Left (but maybe that's true of half a dozen young people go on rampage movies of the time).

 

On 14 December 2008, I was privileged to be at a performance of "OnoChord" by the amazing Yoko Ono at the Baltic in Gateshead. At the end she invited us all to take a piece of pottery from a pot she had smashed that day and to meet up again with our piece in 10 years time . Well - just to say, Yoko, I didn't forget.....

" IMAGINE PEACE

IMAGíNATE LA PAZ

 

yoko ono "

  

Billboard Location:

US 90 SS 0.6mi. W/O Callaghan F/W, San Antonio, Texas

     

" IMAGINE PEACE

IMAGíNATE LA PAZ

  

Billboard Locations:

1 / Highway 78 ES 0.2mi. S/O Loop 1604 F/NE

2 / Thousand oaks NS 1.2mi. W/O Wetmore F/NW

3 / Bandera ES 150ft. N/O Ligustrum F/SE

4 / Austin highway ES 520ft. N/O Vandiver F/NE

5 / Rigsby NS 75ft. W/O Irwin F/W

6 / US 90 SS 0.6mi. W/O Callaghan F/W

7 / Grissom SS 0.2mi. W/O Timber Path F/E

8 / Military SW NS 300ft. W/O new Laredo Highway F/W

9 / Babcock WS 250ft. S/O Springtime F/S "

       

YOKO ONO: IMAGINE PEACE Featuring John & Yoko's Year of Peace

September 26th - October 28th, 2007

UTSA Art Gallery / Department of Art and Art History

The University of Texas at San Antonio

   

"夢をもとう

YUME O MOTOU (LET'S HAVE A DREAM)"

By YOKO ONO & PLASTIC ONO SUPER BAND

Japanese 7-inch single, released in August, 1974

from Odeon Records, Japan

  

B-side: "IT HAPPENED"

By YOKO ONO & PLASTIC ONO SUPER BAND

Japanese 7-inch single, released in August, 1974

from Odeon Records, Japan

  

IT HAPPENED

By Yoko Ono

 

It happened at a time of my life when I least

expected

It happened at a time of my life when I least

expected

 

I don't even remember how it happened

I don't even remember the day it happened

But it happened

Yes, it happened

Ooh, it happened

And I know there's no return, no way

 

I don't even remember how it happened

I don't even remember the day it happened

But it happened

Yes, it happened

Ooh, it happened

And I know there's no return, no way

   

Private Collection of Mikihiko Hori

This photo features Sean Lennon atop the shoulders of his nanny, Helen Seaman.

An interactive exhibition in Frankfurt am Main, Schirn Kunsthalle - 2013-03-30

View from ruins of erythrai

" IMAGINE PEACE

IMAGíNATE LA PAZ

 

yoko ono "

  

Billboard Location:

US 90 SS 0.6mi. W/O Callaghan F/W, San Antonio, Texas

     

" IMAGINE PEACE

IMAGíNATE LA PAZ

  

Billboard Locations:

1 / Highway 78 ES 0.2mi. S/O Loop 1604 F/NE

2 / Thousand oaks NS 1.2mi. W/O Wetmore F/NW

3 / Bandera ES 150ft. N/O Ligustrum F/SE

4 / Austin highway ES 520ft. N/O Vandiver F/NE

5 / Rigsby NS 75ft. W/O Irwin F/W

6 / US 90 SS 0.6mi. W/O Callaghan F/W

7 / Grissom SS 0.2mi. W/O Timber Path F/E

8 / Military SW NS 300ft. W/O new Laredo Highway F/W

9 / Babcock WS 250ft. S/O Springtime F/S "

       

YOKO ONO: IMAGINE PEACE Featuring John & Yoko's Year of Peace

September 26th - October 28th, 2007

UTSA Art Gallery / Department of Art and Art History

The University of Texas at San Antonio

   

Photo credit: Fred Seaman

 

From left to right: Helen Seaman (Sean's nanny and Fred's aunt through marriage), Sean Lennon, John Lennon, Yoko Ono.

Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, revived last year by Yoko Ono Lennon and Sean Ono Lennon after a long hiatus, played an exclusive concert at Háskólabíó, Reykjavík on October 9th 2010, John & Sean Lennon's birthdays.

Sean Lennon setting up his Moogerfooger heavy effects chain at the Chimera Music Showcase at SXSW 2011.

The LennonOno Grant for Peace was created by Yoko Ono Lennon to honour her late husband John Lennon’s dedication to peace and commitment to the preservation of human rights.

 

Created in 2002, this biennial award has always been given to two recipients.

 

To mark this special anniversary year, Yoko Ono presented this award to four recipients who have been selected based on their courage and commitment to peace, truth and human rights.

 

The recipients are:

 

Filmmaker Josh Fox wrote and directed the documentary feature film Gasland in 2010. Josh’s work is known for its mix of gripping narrative, heightened imagery and its commitment to socially conscious themes and subjects.

 

Barbara Kowalcyk was propelled into food safety advocacy in 2001, when her two-year-old son, Kevin, died after suffering an E.coli infection from tainted food. Barbara and her mother Patricia Buck created the Center for Foodborne Illness & Prevention (CFI) a national non-profit organization committed to improving public health by preventing foodborne illness through research, education, advocacy and service.

 

Author Michael Pollan has been writing books and articles about the places where nature and culture intersect: on our plates, in our farms and gardens, and in the built environment. He is the author of numerous best sellers, most recently Food Rules: An Eater’s Manual.

 

Author, poet, and activist Alice Walker is known for her brave stance against racism, sexism, and human rights issues. In 2009, she traveled to Gaza along with a group of 60 other female activists from the anti-war group Code Pink to oppose the controversial blockade and violence against Gaza by Israel and Egypt. Her book Overcoming Speechlessness documents her experiences in Gaza and abroad.

 

Yoko Ono (American, b. Japan 1933)

Mixed media

6 1/8 x 6 1/6 x 7/16” – box; 2 x 5" – note (not exact dimensions)

Washington University in St. Louis purchase, 1990

WU 1990.13.5.K

Yoko Ono

Yes TV Spots (Planet Propaganda for Walker Art Center):

Sphere, 2001.

Three 30-second television

advertisements.

 

"THIS SPHERE WILL BE A SHARP POINT

WHEN IT GETS TO THE FAR CORNER

OF THE ROOM IN YOUR MIND"

 

"YES YOKO ONO

AN EXHIBITION

MARCH 10 - JUNE 17 WALKER ART CENTER

ORGANIZED BY JAPAN SOCIETY, NEW YORK

 

'POINTEDNESS,' 1964 (C)2001 YOKO ONO"

  

Agency: Art and Advertising

 

September 19 – November 8, 2008

Kevin Concannon, PhD, and John Noga, curators

 

Sometimes puzzling, sometimes provocative, works in advertising media by artists ranging from Marcel Duchamp to Jeff Koons to 0100101110101101.ORG have both delighted and disturbed audiences that are sometimes left to wonder exactly what it is they’re seeing. Indeed, artists have used the media of advertising to communicate content that often defies viewers’ expectations and frequently challenges them. Agency: Art and Advertising is an exhibition that explores artists’ use of advertising media as sites for works of art (as opposed to the more conventional use of advertising for the promotion of work) as well as its subject. The exhibition, curated by Kevin Concannon, PhD, and John Noga, will focus on works of art in and about advertising media from the 1960s to the present.

 

Artists themselves, who were largely critical of commercial culture when this “ad art” phenomenon first flourished in the 1960s, are now often ambivalent about –or even embracing of –the commercialism they once critiqued. Others simply choose to use advertising media in order to extend their reach beyond conventional contemporary art audiences. Agency: Art and Advertising examines the history of art in advertising spaces –and art that addresses commodity culture through the appropriation of advertising –as it has evolved over the past 50 years.

 

Stop and Stare

In conjunction with the exhibition, AGENCY: Art and Advertising, shown inside

the McDonough Museum of Art there are nine captivating works that are on view

outside the Museum’s walls. Dotting the Youngstown metropolitan area are

billboards featuring gigantic images created by artists Geoffrey Hendricks,

Marilyn Minter, Yoko Ono and John Lennon, and Felix Gonzalez-Torres. These

spectacular images line the sky, compelling the public to stop and stare.

 

Agency: Art and Advertising

Catalog is available in the museum office or through our gift shop.

 

Exhibition Sponsors

Anonymous

Frank and Pearl Gelbman Charitable Foundation

Elizabeth Firestone Graham Foundation

Lamar Advertising of Youngstown, Inc.

Toby Devan Lewis

Ohio Arts Council

Innis Maggiore

  

McDonough Museum of Art

Tuesday through Saturday, 11-4pm

Wednesday 11am-8pm

Free and open to the public.

call 330.941.1400

htttp://mcdonoughmuseum.ysu.edu

" IMAGINE PEACE

IMAGíNATE LA PAZ

 

yoko ono "

  

Billboard Location:

Grissom SS 0.2mi. W/O Timber Path F/E, San Antonio, Texas

     

" IMAGINE PEACE

IMAGíNATE LA PAZ

  

Billboard Locations:

1 / Highway 78 ES 0.2mi. S/O Loop 1604 F/NE

2 / Thousand oaks NS 1.2mi. W/O Wetmore F/NW

3 / Bandera ES 150ft. N/O Ligustrum F/SE

4 / Austin highway ES 520ft. N/O Vandiver F/NE

5 / Rigsby NS 75ft. W/O Irwin F/W

6 / US 90 SS 0.6mi. W/O Callaghan F/W

7 / Grissom SS 0.2mi. W/O Timber Path F/E

8 / Military SW NS 300ft. W/O new Laredo Highway F/W

9 / Babcock WS 250ft. S/O Springtime F/S "

       

YOKO ONO: IMAGINE PEACE Featuring John & Yoko's Year of Peace

September 26th - October 28th, 2007

UTSA Art Gallery / Department of Art and Art History

The University of Texas at San Antonio

   

" IMAGINE PEACE

IMAGíNATE LA PAZ

 

yoko ono "

  

Billboard Location:

US 90 SS 0.6mi. W/O Callaghan F/W, San Antonio, Texas

     

" IMAGINE PEACE

IMAGíNATE LA PAZ

  

Billboard Locations:

1 / Highway 78 ES 0.2mi. S/O Loop 1604 F/NE

2 / Thousand oaks NS 1.2mi. W/O Wetmore F/NW

3 / Bandera ES 150ft. N/O Ligustrum F/SE

4 / Austin highway ES 520ft. N/O Vandiver F/NE

5 / Rigsby NS 75ft. W/O Irwin F/W

6 / US 90 SS 0.6mi. W/O Callaghan F/W

7 / Grissom SS 0.2mi. W/O Timber Path F/E

8 / Military SW NS 300ft. W/O new Laredo Highway F/W

9 / Babcock WS 250ft. S/O Springtime F/S "

       

YOKO ONO: IMAGINE PEACE Featuring John & Yoko's Year of Peace

September 26th - October 28th, 2007

UTSA Art Gallery / Department of Art and Art History

The University of Texas at San Antonio

   

Photo credit: Paul Goresh

" IMAGINE PEACE

IMAGíNATE LA PAZ

 

yoko ono "

  

Billboard Location:

US 90 SS 0.6mi. W/O Callaghan F/W, San Antonio, Texas

     

" IMAGINE PEACE

IMAGíNATE LA PAZ

  

Billboard Locations:

1 / Highway 78 ES 0.2mi. S/O Loop 1604 F/NE

2 / Thousand oaks NS 1.2mi. W/O Wetmore F/NW

3 / Bandera ES 150ft. N/O Ligustrum F/SE

4 / Austin highway ES 520ft. N/O Vandiver F/NE

5 / Rigsby NS 75ft. W/O Irwin F/W

6 / US 90 SS 0.6mi. W/O Callaghan F/W

7 / Grissom SS 0.2mi. W/O Timber Path F/E

8 / Military SW NS 300ft. W/O new Laredo Highway F/W

9 / Babcock WS 250ft. S/O Springtime F/S "

       

YOKO ONO: IMAGINE PEACE Featuring John & Yoko's Year of Peace

September 26th - October 28th, 2007

UTSA Art Gallery / Department of Art and Art History

The University of Texas at San Antonio

   

Mike Tree with Helen Seaman (Sean's nanny) and Sean Lennon

2exp HDR. Per the signage, this is a 1961 work of art by Yoko Ono - I guess the instrution to "Scream...against the wind" is the art part. If you visit MOMA while this is in place, you'll hear the amplified shrieks, sighs, oms, etc. as soon as you enter the building!

There may not be much difference

Between Donald Trump and you if

we hear you sing

 

WE’RE ALL WATER (New York Rock version) by Yoko Ono

 

There may not be much difference

Between Woody Allen and Mother Theresa if

we strip them naked

 

There may not be much difference

Between Malcom X and Marilyn Monroe if

we check their coffins

 

There may not be much difference

Between White House and Bellevue Hospital if

we count their windows

 

There may not be much difference

Between Judge Thomas and Anita Hill if

we hear their heartbeat

 

We're all water from different rivers

That's why it's so easy to to meet

We're all water in this vast, vast ocean

Someday we'll evaporate together

 

There may not be much difference

Between the Queen of England and Michael Jackson if

we bottle their tears

 

There may not be much difference

Between Madonna and the Pope if

we press their smile

 

There may not be much difference

Between Donald Trump and you if

we hear you sing

 

There may not be much difference

Between you and me if

we show our dreams

 

We're all water from different rivers

That's why it's so easy to to meet

We're all water in this vast, vast ocean

Someday we'll evaporate together

 

For orders and inquiries, please contac : jorgeartajo@gmail.com

" YOKO ONO CUT PIECE

performed by john noga

 

Akron-Summit County Public Main Library Auditorium

Wednesday 29 August 2007 7pm "

 

" YOKO ONO'S CUT PIECE (1964)

Performed by John Noga, graduate assistant, The University of Akron

College of Fine and Applied Arts, Master of Arts Administration program

Introduction by Kevin Concannon, associate professor of art, UA

Wednesday, August 29, 2007 7 pm

Akron-Summit County Public Library

(The Akron-Summit County Public Library is the site of the performance, and is not a sponsor.)

  

Cut Piece

Yoko Ono's performance, Cut Piece (1964), first performed by the artist herself in

Kyoto, Japan, in 1964, will be performed this evening by graduate student and assistant

curator of the IMAGINE PEACE exhibition, John Noga. The exhibition Yoko Ono

IMAGINE PEACE, Featuring John & Yoko's Year of Peace, curated by Kevin

Concannon (with John Noga), is on display through September 7th at the Mary Schiller

Myers School of Art's Emily Davis Gallery in Folk Hall (150 E. Exchange St, Akron)

on the campus of The University of Akron.

  

While Cut Piece is now widely understood as a feminist performance piece, Ono's early

performances of the work were commonly understood quite differently. Ono performed

the piece a number of times between 1964 and 1966. At the time, she spoke of it as a test

of her commitment as an artist. She frequently told interviewers a story about the

Buddha in which he comes across a hungry lioness and her cubs. taking pity on her

plight, he hurls his body off a cliff above the lioness, scattering the pieces of his body to

offer nourishment to the animals. At the moment of his leap, he achieves enlightenment.

  

Ono also often discussed the piece as an attempt to move beyond the artist's ego. The

artist, she explained, often gave his audience what he thought they should have. She

wished instead for the audience to take what it wanted from the work. With Cut Piece,

she expressed this quite literally.

  

The performance score (instructions) calls for the performer to sit on the stage wearing

his or her best suit of clothing with a pair of scissors placed in front of him or her. it is

then announced that members of the audience may approach the stage one at a time to cut

a piece of clothing that they may take with them. The performance ends at the

performer's discretion. Witnessing the performance, it becomes clear that the cutters are

performers as well. The audience observes that each voluntary participation has their own

unique and distinct approach to the work.

  

in 2003, Ono performed the work personally for the last time. She did it, she says, for

peace, and against ageism, racism, and sexism.

  

Thank you for being a part of tonight's special performance of Yoko Ono's Cut Piece

  

The Mary Schiller Myers School of Art

The University of Akron "

   

YOKO ONO'S CUT PIECE (1964)

Performed by John Noga, graduate assistant, The University of Akron

College of Fine and Applied Arts, Master of Arts Administration program

Introduction by Kevin Concannon, associate professor of art, UA

Wednesday, August 29, 2007 7 pm

Akron-Summit County Public Library

Musics, quotes, people from the 60s. Yeah i feel like i belong to the XX century...

"Play It by Trust (1966/2007)", Garden Chess Set version,

for "YOKO ONO IMAGINE PEACE Featuring John & Yoko's Year of Peace" curated by Dr. Kevin Concannon at Emily Davis Gallery / Mary Schiller Myers School of Art / The University of Akron, Ohio, July 6 - September 7, 2007

Yoko Ono

IsReal Gallery: Drill Hole Event, advertisement in New York

Arts Calendar 2, no. 7 (April 1965): n.p.

Private Collection. Reproduction in vinyl.

  

Agency: Art and Advertising

 

September 19 – November 8, 2008

Kevin Concannon, PhD, and John Noga, curators

 

Sometimes puzzling, sometimes provocative, works in advertising media by artists ranging from Marcel Duchamp to Jeff Koons to 0100101110101101.ORG have both delighted and disturbed audiences that are sometimes left to wonder exactly what it is they’re seeing. Indeed, artists have used the media of advertising to communicate content that often defies viewers’ expectations and frequently challenges them. Agency: Art and Advertising is an exhibition that explores artists’ use of advertising media as sites for works of art (as opposed to the more conventional use of advertising for the promotion of work) as well as its subject. The exhibition, curated by Kevin Concannon, PhD, and John Noga, will focus on works of art in and about advertising media from the 1960s to the present.

 

Artists themselves, who were largely critical of commercial culture when this “ad art” phenomenon first flourished in the 1960s, are now often ambivalent about –or even embracing of –the commercialism they once critiqued. Others simply choose to use advertising media in order to extend their reach beyond conventional contemporary art audiences. Agency: Art and Advertising examines the history of art in advertising spaces –and art that addresses commodity culture through the appropriation of advertising –as it has evolved over the past 50 years.

 

Stop and Stare

In conjunction with the exhibition, AGENCY: Art and Advertising, shown inside

the McDonough Museum of Art there are nine captivating works that are on view

outside the Museum’s walls. Dotting the Youngstown metropolitan area are

billboards featuring gigantic images created by artists Geoffrey Hendricks,

Marilyn Minter, Yoko Ono and John Lennon, and Felix Gonzalez-Torres. These

spectacular images line the sky, compelling the public to stop and stare.

 

Agency: Art and Advertising

Catalog is available in the museum office or through our gift shop.

 

Exhibition Sponsors

Anonymous

Frank and Pearl Gelbman Charitable Foundation

Elizabeth Firestone Graham Foundation

Lamar Advertising of Youngstown, Inc.

Toby Devan Lewis

Ohio Arts Council

Innis Maggiore

  

McDonough Museum of Art

Tuesday through Saturday, 11-4pm

Wednesday 11am-8pm

Free and open to the public.

call 330.941.1400

htttp://mcdonoughmuseum

"MOUTHPIECE

 

HIDE MOUTH, HIDE YOUR MOUTH AT

ALL TIMES. GOVERNMENT

SHOULD OUTLAW SUCH IN-

DECENT EXPOSURE

 

YOKO ONO LONDON, OCT, 1966"

 

Mouthpiece, 1966,

advertisement in Art and Artists 1, no. 8 (November 1966)

  

"do it yourself

dance piece:

SWIM IN YOUR SLEEP

GO ON SWIMING UNTIL YOU

FIND AN ISLAND

YOKO ONO 1966"

  

Do It Yourself Dance Piece (Swim in Your Sleep), 1966,

advertisement in Art and Artists 1, no. 9 (December 1966)

  

Agency: Art and Advertising

 

September 19 – November 8, 2008

Kevin Concannon, PhD, and John Noga, curators

 

Sometimes puzzling, sometimes provocative, works in advertising media by artists ranging from Marcel Duchamp to Jeff Koons to 0100101110101101.ORG have both delighted and disturbed audiences that are sometimes left to wonder exactly what it is they’re seeing. Indeed, artists have used the media of advertising to communicate content that often defies viewers’ expectations and frequently challenges them. Agency: Art and Advertising is an exhibition that explores artists’ use of advertising media as sites for works of art (as opposed to the more conventional use of advertising for the promotion of work) as well as its subject. The exhibition, curated by Kevin Concannon, PhD, and John Noga, will focus on works of art in and about advertising media from the 1960s to the present.

 

Artists themselves, who were largely critical of commercial culture when this “ad art” phenomenon first flourished in the 1960s, are now often ambivalent about –or even embracing of –the commercialism they once critiqued. Others simply choose to use advertising media in order to extend their reach beyond conventional contemporary art audiences. Agency: Art and Advertising examines the history of art in advertising spaces –and art that addresses commodity culture through the appropriation of advertising –as it has evolved over the past 50 years.

 

Stop and Stare

In conjunction with the exhibition, AGENCY: Art and Advertising, shown inside

the McDonough Museum of Art there are nine captivating works that are on view

outside the Museum’s walls. Dotting the Youngstown metropolitan area are

billboards featuring gigantic images created by artists Geoffrey Hendricks,

Marilyn Minter, Yoko Ono and John Lennon, and Felix Gonzalez-Torres. These

spectacular images line the sky, compelling the public to stop and stare.

 

Agency: Art and Advertising

Catalog is available in the museum office or through our gift shop.

 

Exhibition Sponsors

Anonymous

Frank and Pearl Gelbman Charitable Foundation

Elizabeth Firestone Graham Foundation

Lamar Advertising of Youngstown, Inc.

Toby Devan Lewis

Ohio Arts Council

Innis Maggiore

  

McDonough Museum of Art

Tuesday through Saturday, 11-4pm

Wednesday 11am-8pm

Free and open to the public.

call 330.941.1400

htttp://mcdonoughmuseum

" IMAGINE PEACE

IMAGíNATE LA PAZ

 

yoko ono "

  

Billboard Location:

Grissom SS 0.2mi. W/O Timber Path F/E, San Antonio, Texas

     

" IMAGINE PEACE

IMAGíNATE LA PAZ

  

Billboard Locations:

1 / Highway 78 ES 0.2mi. S/O Loop 1604 F/NE

2 / Thousand oaks NS 1.2mi. W/O Wetmore F/NW

3 / Bandera ES 150ft. N/O Ligustrum F/SE

4 / Austin highway ES 520ft. N/O Vandiver F/NE

5 / Rigsby NS 75ft. W/O Irwin F/W

6 / US 90 SS 0.6mi. W/O Callaghan F/W

7 / Grissom SS 0.2mi. W/O Timber Path F/E

8 / Military SW NS 300ft. W/O new Laredo Highway F/W

9 / Babcock WS 250ft. S/O Springtime F/S "

       

YOKO ONO: IMAGINE PEACE Featuring John & Yoko's Year of Peace

September 26th - October 28th, 2007

UTSA Art Gallery / Department of Art and Art History

The University of Texas at San Antonio

   

Yoko Ono's "Ad" Events:

"IsReal Gallery; Circle Event," 1965,

"IsReal Gallery; Hole Event," 1965,

"Fountain Piece," 1966,

"Mouthpiece," 1966,

"Do It Yourself Dance Piece (Swim in Your Sleep)," 1966,

for "YOKO ONO IMAGINE PEACE Featuring John & Yoko's Year of Peace" curated by Dr. Kevin Concannon at Emily Davis Gallery / Mary Schiller Myers School of Art / The University of Akron, Ohio, July 6 - September 7, 2007

Yoko Ono

IsReal Gallery: Drill Hole Event, advertisement in New York

Arts Calendar 2, no. 7 (April 1965): n.p.

Private Collection. Reproduction in vinyl.

  

Agency: Art and Advertising

 

September 19 – November 8, 2008

Kevin Concannon, PhD, and John Noga, curators

 

Sometimes puzzling, sometimes provocative, works in advertising media by artists ranging from Marcel Duchamp to Jeff Koons to 0100101110101101.ORG have both delighted and disturbed audiences that are sometimes left to wonder exactly what it is they’re seeing. Indeed, artists have used the media of advertising to communicate content that often defies viewers’ expectations and frequently challenges them. Agency: Art and Advertising is an exhibition that explores artists’ use of advertising media as sites for works of art (as opposed to the more conventional use of advertising for the promotion of work) as well as its subject. The exhibition, curated by Kevin Concannon, PhD, and John Noga, will focus on works of art in and about advertising media from the 1960s to the present.

 

Artists themselves, who were largely critical of commercial culture when this “ad art” phenomenon first flourished in the 1960s, are now often ambivalent about –or even embracing of –the commercialism they once critiqued. Others simply choose to use advertising media in order to extend their reach beyond conventional contemporary art audiences. Agency: Art and Advertising examines the history of art in advertising spaces –and art that addresses commodity culture through the appropriation of advertising –as it has evolved over the past 50 years.

 

Stop and Stare

In conjunction with the exhibition, AGENCY: Art and Advertising, shown inside

the McDonough Museum of Art there are nine captivating works that are on view

outside the Museum’s walls. Dotting the Youngstown metropolitan area are

billboards featuring gigantic images created by artists Geoffrey Hendricks,

Marilyn Minter, Yoko Ono and John Lennon, and Felix Gonzalez-Torres. These

spectacular images line the sky, compelling the public to stop and stare.

 

Agency: Art and Advertising

Catalog is available in the museum office or through our gift shop.

 

Exhibition Sponsors

Anonymous

Frank and Pearl Gelbman Charitable Foundation

Elizabeth Firestone Graham Foundation

Lamar Advertising of Youngstown, Inc.

Toby Devan Lewis

Ohio Arts Council

Innis Maggiore

  

McDonough Museum of Art

Tuesday through Saturday, 11-4pm

Wednesday 11am-8pm

Free and open to the public.

call 330.941.1400

htttp://mcdonoughmuseum

" IMAGINE PEACE

IMAGíNATE LA PAZ

 

yoko ono "

  

Billboard Location:

Babcock WS 250ft. S/O Springtime F/S, San Antonio, Texas

     

" IMAGINE PEACE

IMAGíNATE LA PAZ

  

Billboard Locations:

1 / Highway 78 ES 0.2mi. S/O Loop 1604 F/NE

2 / Thousand oaks NS 1.2mi. W/O Wetmore F/NW

3 / Bandera ES 150ft. N/O Ligustrum F/SE

4 / Austin highway ES 520ft. N/O Vandiver F/NE

5 / Rigsby NS 75ft. W/O Irwin F/W

6 / US 90 SS 0.6mi. W/O Callaghan F/W

7 / Grissom SS 0.2mi. W/O Timber Path F/E

8 / Military SW NS 300ft. W/O new Laredo Highway F/W

9 / Babcock WS 250ft. S/O Springtime F/S "

       

YOKO ONO: IMAGINE PEACE Featuring John & Yoko's Year of Peace

September 26th - October 28th, 2007

UTSA Art Gallery / Department of Art and Art History

The University of Texas at San Antonio

   

" IMAGINE PEACE

IMAGíNATE LA PAZ

 

yoko ono "

  

Billboard Location:

US 90 SS 0.6mi. W/O Callaghan F/W, San Antonio, Texas

     

" IMAGINE PEACE

IMAGíNATE LA PAZ

  

Billboard Locations:

1 / Highway 78 ES 0.2mi. S/O Loop 1604 F/NE

2 / Thousand oaks NS 1.2mi. W/O Wetmore F/NW

3 / Bandera ES 150ft. N/O Ligustrum F/SE

4 / Austin highway ES 520ft. N/O Vandiver F/NE

5 / Rigsby NS 75ft. W/O Irwin F/W

6 / US 90 SS 0.6mi. W/O Callaghan F/W

7 / Grissom SS 0.2mi. W/O Timber Path F/E

8 / Military SW NS 300ft. W/O new Laredo Highway F/W

9 / Babcock WS 250ft. S/O Springtime F/S "

       

YOKO ONO: IMAGINE PEACE Featuring John & Yoko's Year of Peace

September 26th - October 28th, 2007

UTSA Art Gallery / Department of Art and Art History

The University of Texas at San Antonio

   

"Play It by Trust (1966/2007)", Garden Chess Set version,

for "YOKO ONO IMAGINE PEACE Featuring John & Yoko's Year of Peace" curated by Dr. Kevin Concannon at Emily Davis Gallery / Mary Schiller Myers School of Art / The University of Akron, Ohio, July 6 - September 7, 2007

Cover for a school project about 'cruel women'

Yoko Ono

Yes TV Spots (Planet Propaganda for Walker Art Center):

Sphere, 2001.

Three 30-second television

advertisements.

 

"THIS SPHERE WILL BE A SHARP POINT

WHEN IT GETS TO THE FAR CORNER

OF THE ROOM IN YOUR MIND"

 

"YES YOKO ONO

AN EXHIBITION

MARCH 10 - JUNE 17 WALKER ART CENTER

ORGANIZED BY JAPAN SOCIETY, NEW YORK

 

'POINTEDNESS,' 1964 (C)2001 YOKO ONO"

  

Agency: Art and Advertising

 

September 19 – November 8, 2008

Kevin Concannon, PhD, and John Noga, curators

 

Sometimes puzzling, sometimes provocative, works in advertising media by artists ranging from Marcel Duchamp to Jeff Koons to 0100101110101101.ORG have both delighted and disturbed audiences that are sometimes left to wonder exactly what it is they’re seeing. Indeed, artists have used the media of advertising to communicate content that often defies viewers’ expectations and frequently challenges them. Agency: Art and Advertising is an exhibition that explores artists’ use of advertising media as sites for works of art (as opposed to the more conventional use of advertising for the promotion of work) as well as its subject. The exhibition, curated by Kevin Concannon, PhD, and John Noga, will focus on works of art in and about advertising media from the 1960s to the present.

 

Artists themselves, who were largely critical of commercial culture when this “ad art” phenomenon first flourished in the 1960s, are now often ambivalent about –or even embracing of –the commercialism they once critiqued. Others simply choose to use advertising media in order to extend their reach beyond conventional contemporary art audiences. Agency: Art and Advertising examines the history of art in advertising spaces –and art that addresses commodity culture through the appropriation of advertising –as it has evolved over the past 50 years.

 

Stop and Stare

In conjunction with the exhibition, AGENCY: Art and Advertising, shown inside

the McDonough Museum of Art there are nine captivating works that are on view

outside the Museum’s walls. Dotting the Youngstown metropolitan area are

billboards featuring gigantic images created by artists Geoffrey Hendricks,

Marilyn Minter, Yoko Ono and John Lennon, and Felix Gonzalez-Torres. These

spectacular images line the sky, compelling the public to stop and stare.

 

Agency: Art and Advertising

Catalog is available in the museum office or through our gift shop.

 

Exhibition Sponsors

Anonymous

Frank and Pearl Gelbman Charitable Foundation

Elizabeth Firestone Graham Foundation

Lamar Advertising of Youngstown, Inc.

Toby Devan Lewis

Ohio Arts Council

Innis Maggiore

  

McDonough Museum of Art

Tuesday through Saturday, 11-4pm

Wednesday 11am-8pm

Free and open to the public.

call 330.941.1400

htttp://mcdonoughmuseum.ysu.edu

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