PANGAIA Yoko Ono Piece for the Wind T-Shirt
PANGAIA Yoko Ono Piece for the Wind T-Shirt
-
DesignerYoko Ono x Pangaia
-
Material100% Cotton
-
Year of Design2023
-
OriginPortugal
- If for any reason you are not satisfied with your purchase, you may return merchandise within 90 days for a refund in the form of original payment for contiguous U.S orders. Learn More.
-
DesignerYoko Ono x Pangaia
-
Material100% Cotton
-
Year of Design2023
-
OriginPortugal
- If for any reason you are not satisfied with your purchase, you may return merchandise within 90 days for a refund in the form of original payment for contiguous U.S orders. Learn More.
-
DesignerYoko Ono x Pangaia
-
Material100% Cotton
-
Year of Design2023
-
OriginPortugal
- If for any reason you are not satisfied with your purchase, you may return merchandise within 90 days for a refund in the form of original payment for contiguous U.S orders. Learn More.
-
DesignerYoko Ono x Pangaia
-
Material100% Cotton
-
Year of Design2023
-
OriginPortugal
- If for any reason you are not satisfied with your purchase, you may return merchandise within 90 days for a refund in the form of original payment for contiguous U.S orders. Learn More.
You will earn Rewards points.
The name for Yoko Ono’s Grapefruit was chosen as a title because Ono believed the grapefruit to be a hybrid of an orange and a lemon, and viewed it as a reflection of herself as “a spiritual hybrid.”
The first edition of Grapefruit was published under Ono’s own imprint, Wunternaum Press in Tokyo. An original copy of Grapefruit is an object in MoMA’s collection and was featured in the Museum’s 2013–204 exhibition There Will Never Be Silence: Scoring John Cage’s ‘4’33.
The instructions in Grapefruit that are printed on these special-edition apparel designs produced by PANGAIA can be read as playful or serious meditations on life—or acted out through your own interpretation.
Since emerging onto the international art scene in the early 1960s, Yoko Ono has made profound contributions to visual art, performance, filmmaking, and experimental music. Born in Tokyo in 1933, she moved with her family to New York in the mid-1950s and enrolled at Sarah Lawrence College. Over the next decade she lived in New York, Tokyo, and London, greatly influencing the international development of Fluxus and Conceptual art. An artist represented in the Museum’s collection, her work has been featured in various MoMA exhibitions, including Yoko Ono: One Woman Show, 1960–1971 in 2015 and Tokyo 1955–1970: A New Avant-Garde in 2012–2013. .
Authenticity Guarantee
At MoMA Design Store, all of the designs we sell are curator-approved and authentic. We ensure the integrity of our products through research and by working closely with the designers. Our products embody the spirit of good design objects in MoMA's collection. Some of them are actual designs represented in the Museum's collection.