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Showing 1 - 9 of
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Yoko Ono
Laurie Anderson, Eriko Osaka, Thierry Raspail
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R943
Discovery Miles 9 430
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The definitive monograph on the work of celebrated visual artist,
musician and peace activist Yoko Ono Born in Tokyo in 1933, Yoko
Ono is one of the most important living artists working today. In a
career that spans over six decades, Ono has experimented with a
broad variety of media, including music, performance art, and film.
Mostly known for her early involvement with the Fluxus art movement
in the late 1950s and her professional and personal association
with Beatles frontman John Lennon, Ono’s ground-breaking work has
been influential to generations of artists as well as her incessant
campaigning for World peace.
Marlene D. Morel is an emotionally troubled Chinese-American
teenage girl growing up in Utopia-Zurich, Switzerland. To avoid her
drunk, abusive father, who is the Swiss version of Oscar Wilde and
her American mother, a has-been soap opera star, who has no
interest in her chubby, slant-eyed daughter, Marlene spends most of
her time hiding inside the warehouse, which houses the family
business, Morel Theatrical Costumier. Preferring life among
mannequins, props and costumes, Marlene has created over the years,
a life of make-believe, where her imagination runs rampant. Trouble
is, unbeknownst to her, she's also created an alter-ego named Bad
Egg who happens to be a 'toon' and who wants to eliminate Marlene's
personality all together. And to make things worse, Bad Egg has
also created an alter-ego in the form of Kali, the Hindu Goddess of
Sex and Destruction who plans on murdering Marlene's abusive
father. Between these three out of control personalities, not to
mention, Marlene's difficult circumstances with both parents, the
poor girl ends up in a mental institution. With the help of a
Jungian psychologist named Dr. Karin Sommerfeldt, Marlene D.
Pig-Ponies is a cross between the films, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's
Nest and American Beauty.
Illuminating the photographer's contributions to New York's
Downtown art scene and her acute feminist work Photographer Marcia
Resnick (b. 1950) earned recognition as part of the legendary
Downtown New York art scene of the 1970s and 1980s. Her portraits
of the era's major cultural figures, such as Jean-Michel Basquiat,
John Belushi, and Susan Sontag, have contributed to the scene's
mythic status. Against this backdrop, Resnick also produced a
significant body of work that engaged with the history of art, took
a humorous approach to conceptual art and feminism, and proposed
new ideas for what photography could be. Spanning the artist's
career, this richly illustrated volume explores Resnick's early
influences and education at Cooper Union and CalArts; discusses her
series and photobooks such as See and Re-visions; and situates the
artist's work within the history of contemporary art. An afterword
by Laurie Anderson speaks to the very personal vision of Resnick's
photography. Published in association with the Bowdoin College
Museum of Art, George Eastman Museum, and Minneapolis Institute of
Art Exhibition Schedule: Bowdoin College Museum of Art, Brunswick,
ME (February 24-June 5, 2022) Minneapolis Institute of Art (August
13-December 11, 2022) George Eastman Museum, Rochester, NY
(February 10-June 18, 2023)
1986's Home of the Brave is the soundtrack to a film consisting of
live pieces debuted during Laurie Anderson's first world tour,
promoting 1984's Mister Heartbreak. Only one song from that album,
a radically reworked version of the William S. Burroughs cameo
'Sharkey's Night,' appears here-the rest of the album is something
of a return to the performance art basis of Anderson's earlier work
like Big Science and United States I-IV. Warner.
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