Yoko Ono has collaborated with the Italian coffee company Illy on a collection called “Yoko Ono: Mended Cups,”
to be released in conjunction with her upcoming show at the Museum of
Modern Art. You (probably) won’t be able to drink out of those pieces,
but you can from these cups inspired by the Japanese art of Kintsugi,
where cracked pottery is repaired with lacquer mixed with gold. The cups
are also inspired by the depressed grandmother’s art of bumming you
out, with each one bearing a message reminding of you some tragic
historical event while you eat breakfast.
Those
messages are written in Ono’s handwriting on accompanying saucers,
letting you know, for example, “This cup was broken in My Lai on March
16th, 1968,” during the My Lai Massacre. Other grim reminders of man’s
capacity for inflicting pain that you can sip from include cups
commemorating the Nanking Massacre, the Dresden bombing, and Hiroshima.
All together they form a rich, beverage-holding tapestry that captures
the devastation of war, sort of like the Guernica of coffee cups—particularly the coffee cup that mentions Guernica. It’s also simply rich, with a price tag of $250 for the set.
Still,
Ono also allows for peace with a single, unblemished cup promising,
“This cup will never be broken as it is under your protection.” This cup
is available separately, for the price of $40. That way, when you
inevitably drop it in the dishwasher, you will experience a small taste
of what Hiroshima felt like.
Notably, among the six world-shaking
tragedies Ono chose to highlight is December 8, 1980, the date John
Lennon was assassinated. That cup is now Ono’s saddest artwork honoring
her late husband since she made him a hoodie with a butt on it. But you couldn’t drink out of that.
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