"For an art audience, I think there will be some surprises," Sarah Loyer, The Broad's Curator and Exhibitions Manager said in a recent interview. "And for a general audience who knows her name but may not know much about her art practice, there's a lot to discover."
The exhibition's title speaks to a philosophy Ono has held since childhood. Loyer traces it to a formative moment: when Ono was evacuated as a young girl from Tokyo during World War II and food was scarce, she and her brother would lie on the ground, look up at the sky, and imagine menus together. Art, for Ono, was always something that could be conjured from the mind alone—a survival tool as much as an aesthetic one.
That belief found its formal expression in her "instruction" works, short texts that describe actions for viewers to complete or reflect upon. The typescript drafts for her landmark 1964 book Grapefruit, which contains more than 200 instructions—such as "Listen to the sound of the Earth turning," "Fly," and "Draw a map to get lost"—will be at The Broad. These pieces exist somewhere between score and poem, and several will be activated for audience participation, including Painting to Hammer a Nail (1961/1966). The exhibition begins with one of Ono's earliest conceptual works, FILM NO. 1 ("MATCH") / Fluxfilm No. 14 (1966), in which the instruction reads simply: light a match and watch until it goes out.
















