John Cale's song "Hey Ray" from the Extra Playful EP (2011) is about Cale's encounters with Johnson in New York during the 1960s.
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Released as a B-side on the "Found That Soul" single (2001), "Locust Valley" describes Johnson as "Famously unknown/Elusive and dismantled."
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Their collaboration yielded the award-winning documentary "How to Draw a Bunny", released in 2002.
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Johnson moved with Richard Lippold to New York City by early 1949, rejoining Cage and Cunningham and befriending, within the next couple of years, Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns, Cy Twombly, Ad Reinhardt, Stanley Vanderbeek, Norman Solomon, Lucy Lippard, Sonja Sekula, Carolyn Brown and Earle Brown, Judith Malina, Diane Di Prima, Julian Beck, Remy Charlip, James Waring, and innumerable others.
Ray Charles | Lyndon B. Johnson | Ray Bradbury | X-ray | Samuel Johnson | Man Ray | Johnson & Johnson | Dwayne Johnson | Boris Johnson | Johnson | Satyajit Ray | Andrew Johnson | Stevie Ray Vaughan | Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center | Magic Johnson | Ray Milland | Robert Johnson | Ray Liotta | Ray Davies | Sugar Ray Leonard | Billy Ray Cyrus | Ray Stevens | Blu-ray Disc | James Weldon Johnson | Jack Johnson | Ray Winstone | Ray Kurzweil | X-ray crystallography | Ray Brown (musician) | Ray Bolger |
Wilson became an integral part of Johnson's mail art circle and was initiated into the New York avant-garde through letters and small works that she exchanged with Robert Watts, George Brecht, Ad Reinhardt, Leonard Cohen, Arman, and many others.
According to PTE Ray Johnson, one of the two men with Kovco at the time of the shooting, "Dreams" by The Cranberries was playing on an mp3 player and Kovco stood at his bunk bed typing on his laptop while the men laughed and mimicked the lead singer Dolores O'Riordan.