plaster, 18cm x 18cm x 18cm 2009
Friday, 12 March 2010
Chris Cornish & Alison Moffett — Project Cube 2009
plaster, 18cm x 18cm x 18cm 2009
Yoko Ono — Mend Piece for Merry England (Arnolfini, Brsitol, UK 2008)
Yoko Ono— A Hole [Gallery 360, Tokyo, Japan]
The artwork titled “A HOLE” is a plate of glass with a bullet hole pierced through by a gun shot.
There is an English text underneath the hole as follows: “A HOLE GO TO THE OTHER SIDE OF THE GLASS AND SEE THROUGH THE HOLE.” The text allows viewers to move around voluntarily and watch the space through the hole.
Among the works of YOKO ONO, there are some works which use holes for material, and several instructions written in the 60’s, which are collected in “Grapefruit”. Also, the well-known postcard with a hole in the middle and a text; the hole to see the sky through.
For Ono, a hole is an entrance to the way to un-rock one’s mind. This time, the plate of glass was intentionally shot to make the hole. The hole was made with gun – the symbol of battle and violence. Pain remains fresh with the bullet hole.
However, even the hole holding the trace of cruelty can be an air hole leading to hopes and dreams if you change your viewpoint or convert your mindset. In order to remind you of the mind-set conversion, Ono instructs you to go to the other side of the bullet hole and look. It is an action to switch sides from the one who shot to the one who was shot.
In our society, contradictory deeds exist on two sides of the same piece of glass. However, there is always an air hole to solve issues. Let us have insights to make objective observations of society, never lose hope, and live for the future. Here, Ono’s message is strongly expressed.