The retrospective exhibition titled "Dream Come True" by US-based Japanese artist Yoko Ono (Tokio, 1933) will be on display at the Museo de Arte Latinoamericano in Buenos Aires (MALBA) from June 24 to October 31. Curated by Gunnar B. Kvaran and Agustín Pérez-Rubio, the exhibition consists of more than eighty works including objects, videos, films, installations and sound recordings produced between the early 1970s to this day. It is centered on the so called Instructions that Ono has been developing for over sixty years. The exhibition project contemplates two aspects: on the one hand, the exhibits in the MALBA's own exhibition rooms and, on the other, the promotion of a great part of her works in public spaces (posters, group exhibitions, advertisements), mass media (newspapers, magazines, television, and radio), and social networks (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Tumblr). In this manner, Yoko Ono amplifies the reach of a socially and politically committed body of work that stems from her participation in movements like feminism, pacifism and environmentalism. In "Dreams Come True," Yoko Ono invites us to an experience that seeks to transform the manner in which we relate to ourselves and to others.