Opposite page: Top; Kangaroo (1979): The pouch represents "the establishment" — the people are jumping out of the pouch, running away from the strict regulation imposed upon them by society. Middle: Suitors (1976): John believed every man hides behind a mask when he speaks to a woman — flowers and fine words can only get a man so far. The woman must remove the mask and determine which suitor will make the best mate. Bottom: Aisumasen — I'm Sony (1979): John and Yoko sit back to back; they bare their souls to one another and to us — two people who are able to love and wise enough to know when to say "I'm sorry." This page, left: Making its exclusive premiere in Ann Arbor is Lennon's Power to the People. The sketch is a reference to the 1971 Ann Arbor concert/rally at which Lennon and Ono performed to free left-wing author/activist John Sinclair from prison. Sinclair was freed 55 hours after the concert. minimum $500, though some of the original, signed Bag One pieces are reselling for tens of thousands these days. Schwartz notes that many of the Lennon buyers would not fall into the category of traditional art collector. They are fans who might otherwise never attend an art exhibit, or peo- ple who've previously felt too intim- idated by a gallery setting to browse for art. Yoko "wanted to get the artwork to the people," Schwartz says. "The general public wasn't getting to see it." Lennon's modus operandi was the simple, unadorned quick sketch. Some of the works on display are doo- dles he tossed off in mere seconds. And they have a cartoonish quality which Clifford believes presages the popular style of later artists such as Keith Haring. Others have seen in- fluences of Picasso and Matisse in Lennon's style. Whatever their value to the an- nals of art history, they are by the hand of John Lennon. And that, in itself, lends the sketches a poignan- cy they might otherwise lack. `The joy it gives them and the mes- sage it sends," says Clifford of the au- dience and the artwork, " — that, more than anything aesthetically, is why people purchase the art and nev- er want to give it up." ❑ `The Artwork ofJohn Lennon" will be presented July 24-27 in Ann Arbor. Hours are 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Wednesday-Friday and 9 pan Saturday in the Michi- gan Union Ballroom, 530 S. State Street. The exhibit will include 45 serigraphs, original Bag One works, a portfolio of Lennon song lyrics and original production eels from "Yellow Submarine," plus several original drawings by Lennon, never previously shown. Call (707) 526-8991 for more in- formation.