Articles

Radical Instructions: Yoko Ono and Radical Imagination

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21827/krisis.45.1.42350

Keywords:

Yoko Ono, Instruction, Institution, Radical imagination, Art, Autonomy

Abstract

Although art is not part of the domain of radical politics, it may bear certain radical qualities. What are they? And precisely what is “radical” about Yoko Ono’s “instructions,” if anything? In this paper, I critically reconstruct the concept of instruction through the politics of form. I reflect upon Ono’s instruction pieces from the viewpoint of a historical ontology of art and imaginary institutionalization theories to illuminate their philosophical meaning and social-political undercurrents and to renew our understanding of the instruction form. More specifically, I problematize the instruction/institution dialectic and develop the central argument that the radical potential of the instruction pieces lies in their contribution to the radical imagination and the project of autonomy.

Author Biography

Gabriella Daris, Kingston University

Gabriella Daris obtained her PhD in Philosophy from the Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy (CRMEP) at Kingston University, London. Daris has held visiting research fellowships or lectureships at Yale University, Waseda University, the University of Belgrade, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Getty Research Institute. Formerly a critic at Blouin Artinfo and Modern Painters, she has curated solo exhibitions of Yoko Ono and Gustav Metzger, among others. Daris works within a critical-theoretical tradition at the intersection of art, philosophy and politics, and is currently completing a book manuscript that critically examines Yoko Ono’s thought, early works and writings.

 

Published

2025-12-17

How to Cite

Daris, Gabriella. 2025. “Radical Instructions: Yoko Ono and Radical Imagination”. Krisis | Journal for Contemporary Philosophy 45 (1): 43-58. https://doi.org/10.21827/krisis.45.1.42350.