Donnerstag, 21. September 2023
grapefruit book yoko ono tokyo 1964 ff.
AGEVIRTUEL VIRTUALAGE
bloGspOt 3337
dweed 1757
https://twitter.com/PeterHelm12/status/1704650400291336669
Burn this book after you‘ve read it
-YOKO
This is the greatest book I‘ve ever burned
-JOHN
Photograph by Iain Macmillan
Jacket design by Donna Lampell
Publisher Simon & Schuster New York 1970
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grapefruit_(book)
c.. 450,00 EUR
photo shows Book verso
DWEED 1757
https://twitter.com/PeterHelm12/status/1704650400291336669
grapefruit
First edition
The name Grapefruit was chosen as title because Ono believed the grapefruit to be a hybrid of an orange and a lemon, and thus a reflection of herself as "a spiritual hybrid".
It also seems likely that it is a playful allusion to Brecht's Water Yam, itself a pun on Brecht and Watt's Yam Festival, which, culminating in a series of events and performances in May 1963, had been derived from "May" backwards.
The first edition that was published in 1964 in Japan by Wunternaum Press created by Yoko Ono, contains over 150 "instruction works"; virtually all are in English, with about a third translated into Japanese. They are divided into five sections: Music, Painting, Event, Poetry and Object. The instructions are preceded by dedications to figures including John Cage, La Monte Young, Nam June Paik, Isamu Noguchi and Peggy Guggenheim, and also includes documentation relating to Ono's recent exhibitions and performances.
The work was originally sold for $3.00 before publication, $6.00 after.
1964
Wunternaum Press. Tokyo, Japan (Paperback)
Subsequent editions
The second edition was published in 1970 by Simon & Schuster in New York,
Peter Owen Ltd in London, and
Bärmeier & Nikel in Frankfurt.
As well as an introduction by John Lennon ("Hi! My name is John Lennon. I'd like you to meet Yoko Ono ..."
In the 2000 reissue of Lennon's 1964 book,
In His Own Write, Ono wrote a similar introduction), the work contained 80 more instruction pieces, and included two more sections, Film and Dance.
The book ends with a collection of Ono's writings including To The Wesleyan People, 1966.
Paperback editions were issued by Sphere and Touchstone around the same time,
and a reprint by Simon & Schuster in 2000.
The Sphere edition has a memorable sleeve, conflating the title with Yoko Ono's film Bottoms, (or no. 4), a film composed exclusively of naked bottoms, made in 1966.
1970
Bärmeier & Nikel. Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Peter Owen. London, UK
Simon & Schuster. New York, USA (Hardcover with dust jacket)
POMELO. Ediciones de la Flor. Buenos Aires, Argentina
1971
Sphere Books. London, UK
Simon & Schuster. New York, USA (Paperback)
TouchStone Book, USA
2000
This book shall be burnt. Written inside the book by yoko.
GrapeFruit The Book by Yoko Ono 2000 Edition.
Simon & Schuster. New York, USA
Bakhåll. Sweden
2004
PAMPLEMOUSSE.
Textuel. France
2005
GRAPEFRUIT. INSTRUZIONE PER L'ARTE E PER LA VITA.
Mondadori. Italy
2006
POMELO. Centro de Creación Experimental. Cuenca, Spain
2015
Museum of Modern Art. New York, USA.
(Facsimile of first edition in slip case.)
Planned sequel
Grapefruit II was planned as a sequel. It is mentioned once in Grapefruit and had a pre-publication price of $5 and a post-release price of $10. It was planned to be released in 1966 and is currently unreleased. Ono stated that it would contain 150 new pieces not featured in Grapefruit, including her "touch poems".
<>
grapefruit
Works and drawings by Yoko Ono
Introduction by John Lennon
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