Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lennon honored with submarine artwork

- BY LUQMAN ADENIYI

NEW YORK — Standing in front of artwork depicting Manhattan as a yellow submarine and John Lennon as the pilot displaying the peace sign, Yoko Ono joined Bono and other guests to honor her late husband Wednesday.

Ono said the tapestry at Ellis Island is “so special” and the Beatles band member would have loved it.

Lennon appears on the artwork commission­ed by Art for Amnesty founder Bill Shipsey to thank Ono on behalf of human rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal. The organizati­on raised more than $5 million in royalties from covers of Lennon’s post-Beatles music since 2004.

The artwork showing Manhattan as a yellow submarine in a sea of blue is on display at the Ellis Island National Museum of Immigratio­n. Music executive Jimmy Iovine, U2 rocker Bono, and his bandmate The Edge, covered the cost for Ne York-based Czech artist Peter Sis to design the commemorat­ive piece.

“This is a very happy moment for the family,” Ono said.

At the event, City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito declared July 29 as John Lennon Day.

Bono, who is coming off an eight-show run at Madison Square Garden, also gave remarks about the significan­ce of the tapestry being at Ellis Island and claimed Lennon as Irish.

“Let’s claim him. In fact, let’s claim all the Beatles not as immigrants but as Irish,” Bono said.

The tapestry unveiling marks the 40th anniversar­y of Lennon getting his green card.

“John had to fight to get here,” Ono said. “John had to fight to actually be accepted here.”

Lennon, who was originally from Liverpool, England, appeared in several deportatio­n hearings in the early 1970s. He initially was not granted U.S. residency, but that decision was overturned in 1975.

Ono said Lennon was determined to stay in the U.S. partly because of the change he believed could happen.

“He was really, really concerned about what’s happening in the world, and he knew that what we do in America is really going to affect the whole world,” Ono said.

Ono, a peace and human rights activist, said she will continue communicat­ing with the public through art and music.

Her artwork is on display at the New York Museum of Modern Art in an exhibit called “Yoko Ono: One Woman Show, 1960-1971.” The show ends in September.

The avant-garde singer also is working on a new album, “Yes, I am a Witch Too,” as a sequel to her 2007 cover and remix LP.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Bono, right, and Yoko Ono, widow of John Lennon, react during the playing of “Stand by Me” as they attend the unveiling of a tapestry depicting the island of Manhattan as a yellow submarine piloted by a waving Lennon at Ellis Island on Wednesday in New...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Bono, right, and Yoko Ono, widow of John Lennon, react during the playing of “Stand by Me” as they attend the unveiling of a tapestry depicting the island of Manhattan as a yellow submarine piloted by a waving Lennon at Ellis Island on Wednesday in New...

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