Yoko Ono “Sky TV for Washington” (1966/2014)

“Sky TV is, in Yoko Ono’s words, “a TV just to see the sky.” It brings a live image of the outdoors into the gallery, rain or shine, twenty-four hours a day. When the work was first conceived, in 1966, the artist lived in a windowless space and “wanted so desperately to have a sky in my apartment.” Sky TV is one of the earliest works of art to harness the instant feedback capability of the video camera. The simplicity of its imagery was especially radical at a time before the popularity of videotape and when all material seen onscreen was created by commercial broadcast companies. The sky has been a recurrent motif throughout Ono’s career. She recalls looking up at it as a form of refuge during World War II in Japan: “The sky is the only thing that was shining—beautifully—and it never stops shining.””

Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden

Yoko Ono, Jon Hendricks
COLOR, FLY, SKY
Roskilde, Denmark: Museet for Samtidskunst, 1992.
[47] pp., 20.5 x 21 x 3 cm., boxed loose leaves
Edition size unknown

Edited by curator Jon Hendricks on the occasion of the exhibition of the same name at Museet for Samtidskunst, Roskilde, this boxed work contains forty-five cardboard sheets and two pamphlets. These reproduce texts, scores and conceptual works by Ono, as well as photographic stills from her 1970 film Fly.

Cy Twombly

Sunset, 2008
Gaeta
Edition 16
Dry-print on cardboard
43.1 x 27.9 cm
17 x 11 inches

Painting Detail “Roses”, 2009
Gaeta
Edition 6
Dry-print on cardboard
43.1 x 27.9 cm
17 x 11 inches

Brushes, 2005
Lexington, VA
Edition 6
Dry-print on cardboard
43.1 x 27.9 cm
17 x 11 inches

Tulips
1985. 
Dry-print on cardboard 
43.1 x 27.9 cm
17 x 11 inches