For the first time in Montenegro, an exhibition of the legendary artist will open tonight in Podgorica at the Museum of Contemporary Art. Yoko Ono, artists, activists and pioneers of the avant-garde that marked the history of contemporary art.
The "Unfinished" exhibition will open in the exhibition space of the Petrović Palace and Perjanički Dom, at 20 p.m. The curators of the exhibition are: Maša Vlaović, Gunnar B. Kvaran i Connor Monahan.

"Don't miss the encounter with art that invites you to think, feel and act. Yoko Ono breaks down the boundaries between the audience and the work of art, inviting you to be a part of her art yourself," says the MSUCG, reminding that admission to the opening is free.
Performances, video works, installations, textual instructions and world-famous peace campaigns are part of the setting of this exhibition, which will be open until September 15th.
Born in Tokyo in 1933, into a family of samurai, priest, and banker. Raised in Tokyo, and lived in San Francisco and New York.
"Even as a child, she learned to turn the sounds of the city and nature into music - clocks, birdsong, the sound of footsteps," the MSUCG said.
She survived World War II and the bombing of Tokyo.
"Hiroshima and Nagasaki left an indelible mark on her consciousness - and her art. She was the first woman to study philosophy at the prestigious Gakushūin University. In Japan, she absorbed existentialism and pacifism, and in America, poetry and composition. Her aunt, Varvara Bubnova, "Russian avant-garde painter, brought the spirit of modernism to Japan. Her father, a concert pianist and banker, made family films when that was a rarity. Art was in her blood," the MSUCG reminds us and says:
"Yoko is not just an artist. She is a concept. A movement. A voice of peace and courage."
The Yoko Ono exhibition “Unfinished” includes a wide range of works: from textual instructions and participatory installations, through performances and video works, to documentation of her peace campaigns and engagement in the fight for human rights.
"Through each of these forms, visitors are invited not to remain mere observers, but to become actors in the process - to imagine peace, to speak it, to write it, to share it," they state.
Bonus video:
