Tuesday, May 12, 2009

I Think I'm Going To Be Sick

I found this article lying around in the bowels of the net....it appears Yoko has outdone herself.

One of the last things visitors will see when “John Lennon: The New York City Years” opens to the general public Tuesday (May 12th) at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Annex in Manhattan almost didn’t make the exhibit, which was curated by Lennon’s widow, Yoko Ono, and Jim Henke from the Rock Hall. It is perhaps the most striking of the items that will be on display through late fall.


It’s a small canvas bag from New York’s St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital Center, and it’s wrapped in plastic. It contains the clothing Lennon was wearing the night he was murdered, and Ono says she thought long and hard before making the bag the exhibit’s parting shot. The message the bag — and a photo Ono snapped of Lennon’s blood-soaked glasses — sends about gun violence was too powerful to keep private. The message, that more than 932,000 people have died as a result of gun violence since her husband’s murder, was “important for people to see that, and for people to understand what violence is about.”

Ono, dressed in a pin-stripped blazer, shades and a white hat, spoke during a press conference today, and says initially, she figured she “would be criticized” for including the bag, labeled “Patient’s Belongings,” as part of an exhibit celebrating Lennon’s love of the Big Apple, and its influence on his art, his life, and ultimately, his death.

“John loved New York City. When he came here, he felt it was his home, and this is a thorough representation of John’s life in New York,” Ono told reporters of the exhibit, adding that she’s sure Lennon was lonely at times, as he was the only one of the Beatles who resided in Manhattan. “He was head over heels in love with this city, and when you’re in love, you forget you had a past.”

The exhibit features a number of items from the Rock Hall Museum, as well as a museum in Japan. Other items, Ono confessed, came from her closet. Among the treasures on display, fans will find Lennon’s iconic “New York City” muscle shirt (stains and all), a number of collages, self-portraits (including one of Lennon’s as the Statue of Liberty), and handwritten lyrics to songs like “Working Class Hero,” “God” and “Woman is the Nigger of the World,” some scribbled on recording studio and hotel stationary. There’s also the Fender Telecaster Lennon played on stage with Elton John at Madison Square Garden in 1974, rare video footage of Lennon and Ono in New York, and the couple’s official declaration of Nutopia: The Country of Peace.

The exhibit also chronicles Lennon’s fight against deportation, with his green card, his visa, and letters of support from the likes of Dick Clark and Joan Baez.

Ono says the exhibit is the first of its kind, and for those who swing by to take it all in, Yoko has included something to ensure it’s like no other exhibit you’ve experienced. A white phone is affixed to the wall, and the card next to it reads, “A Phone For Peace.” The simple instructions? “When the phone rings, pick it up.” Ono said she’ll be calling the phone, “only when I remember,” to deliver a message of peace to whoever answers, she says.


Great....We get to be reminded about John's murder AGAIN...this time for REAL and as a part of a MUSEUM exhibit....a bag of the clothes he was wearing on that fateful December Night in 1980..and a pic of his bloody glasses("bloody" meaning bloodstained and not my halfhearted attempt at sounding British)....on a pedestal for the downtown Manhattan tourists to gawk at.

I'm sure Yoko thinks this is ART in some way even though she's sending a message...This is a woman who displayed ladders leading to nowhere, right. Art is everywhere, right???

Why not put his autopsy photos up for the next retrospective, Ms. ONO....Jesus H. Christ...can't we just listen to Plastic Ono Band or Sgt. Peppers...or visit Strawberry Fields in Central Park....? Would that be enough?

I doubt any of those close to being post office killers or Columbine wannabees will ever learn anything from a bloody bag of John's clothes..other than the fact that Ms. Ono is insane.

3 comments:

  1. I find this highly offensive too. I may link to this from my "WFIO" blog to see what others think. I'd like to question her gun death statistics because I know how they typically come up with the numbers to make them look much larger than they actually are. AND we all know its not the availability of a gun that causes someone to shoot someone else. Yes, it makes it easier, but its people that that make the choice to murder, not guns.

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  2. Exactly, people choose to kill other people, .....and maybe not the type of people who can afford the 25 dollar entrance fee to this museum...madmen will use whatever means necessary to kill another person, poison,box cutter, fists,baseball bats, tire irons, and weapons of mass destruction....feel free to link, Barb.

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