By Suzanne Donahue
| Thursday, April 03, 2014 - Off The Shelf
Yoko Ono’s Grapefruit was
originally published in 1964 in a special printing of five hundred copies.
It was published when Ono was an up-and-coming avant-garde artist in New
York City—two years before she met John Lennon and got involved in all the
Beatles’ brouhaha.
As a piece of conceptual art it is
breathtakingly original. It is compelling, beautiful, fun, sly, and
revolutionary. Reading it, you can understand how cutting edge Ono’s work
was when it was originally created. Even now, forty years later, when
artists routinely perform similar work and we have become inured to the
amazing, Ono’s ideas and instructions are still fresh and provocative.
This book works as inspiration for
creation, zen meditation, poetry, and as actual pieces for performance but
it also works as great bedside reading. Every time I pick up this book I
get lost. I can read the instructions for a piece over and over and each
time, and it will deliver something new.
Here is one of my favorites from
spring 1964:
ECHO TELEPHONE PIECE
Get a telephone that only echoes back
your voice.
Call every day and talk about many
things.
I give copies of this book to people
all the time as gifts and I keep it by my bed because it’s fun to read. I
haven’t ever tried to do one thing in the book but when I read it I see the
world differently and am reminded that my view of the world can be changed
at any time, just by tilting my head.
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