1 00:00:07,640 --> 00:00:12,140 [Katharina Grosse: Painting with Color] 2 00:00:12,800 --> 00:00:15,980 [Katharina Grosse Studio, Berlin, Germany] 3 00:00:16,240 --> 00:00:20,180 I got to write this poem down here on my wrist-- 4 00:00:20,180 --> 00:00:21,660 on my arm. 5 00:00:23,100 --> 00:00:24,660 Stilton cheese. 6 00:00:26,280 --> 00:00:29,760 I'm going to make a Christmas card for my friends. 7 00:00:30,160 --> 00:00:35,960 One side of the card is going to be a photograph of a poem that I really like. 8 00:00:36,800 --> 00:00:40,300 I've written it down on paper, 9 00:00:40,860 --> 00:00:43,860 and I think maybe it's better on my skin. 10 00:00:46,380 --> 00:00:48,620 When I started painting, I stopped reading. 11 00:00:49,660 --> 00:00:52,820 In school, I loved to learn languages and read things, 12 00:00:52,829 --> 00:00:56,000 and I really stopped that at the moment that I started painting. 13 00:00:56,000 --> 00:00:57,300 And I didn't know why. 14 00:00:57,300 --> 00:01:00,320 It took me a little while to understand why I did it. 15 00:01:01,760 --> 00:01:04,900 It's a poem by an Austrian poet, 16 00:01:04,900 --> 00:01:08,000 and his name is Ernst Jandl, 17 00:01:08,000 --> 00:01:13,980 and he's made a lot of really fantastic poems that are just sound, and... 18 00:01:14,000 --> 00:01:17,400 yeah, they're super fascinating. 19 00:01:18,460 --> 00:01:24,180 The linguistic structure urges you towards a certain order system 20 00:01:24,190 --> 00:01:26,890 where things follow one another, which is very linear. 21 00:01:26,890 --> 00:01:30,950 And I realize that painting does not have a linear structure; 22 00:01:31,310 --> 00:01:36,330 but the synchronicity in painting is super compelling for your thought process. 23 00:01:36,330 --> 00:01:37,710 [sound of the camera phone's shutter clicking] 24 00:01:41,700 --> 00:01:44,480 Okay, we have to do it again. 25 00:01:48,900 --> 00:01:53,740 It's very rare that you read something profound and fundamental on color. 26 00:01:57,760 --> 00:02:01,240 Modern critics write about the concept on what you can see 27 00:02:01,250 --> 00:02:04,960 or what is being dealt with politically or socially; 28 00:02:04,960 --> 00:02:10,260 but, painting being discussed in the realm of color is never happening. 29 00:02:13,180 --> 00:02:18,540 Interestingly enough, color is an element in painting that has always been discussed 30 00:02:18,549 --> 00:02:22,900 from the 17th Century on--in the big academy in Paris or wherever-- 31 00:02:22,900 --> 00:02:29,450 as the female, less stable, less clear, and not so intelligent element of painting, 32 00:02:29,450 --> 00:02:32,650 whereas the concept--the line, the drawing-- 33 00:02:32,650 --> 00:02:39,210 is more the male, the clear, the progressive, and intelligent part of the artwork. 34 00:02:45,749 --> 00:02:50,769 I think that I am dealing with this heritage in an interesting way, 35 00:02:50,769 --> 00:02:55,849 because color is such a very very important spatial feature in my work, 36 00:02:55,849 --> 00:03:00,219 in relationship to the crystallized and built and materialized world 37 00:03:00,219 --> 00:03:04,279 that is part of what I do when I paint in space. 38 00:03:05,269 --> 00:03:08,950 I like this anarchic potential of color. 39 00:03:08,950 --> 00:03:15,319 I see it very clearly that color is actually taking away the boundary of the object. 40 00:03:15,319 --> 00:03:18,359 So there is no subject-object relationship anymore. 41 00:03:18,359 --> 00:03:22,980 And I think that's maybe what color has the potential to make us think. 42 00:03:22,980 --> 00:03:26,920 [Johann König Gallery, Berlin, Germany] 43 00:03:27,560 --> 00:03:31,900 It's the first time I'm showing works on paper in a show. 44 00:03:32,200 --> 00:03:35,760 When I came back from my annual surfing holiday, [LAUGHS] 45 00:03:35,760 --> 00:03:39,900 I started with works on paper and I kept going. 46 00:03:40,520 --> 00:03:41,859 And I found it very interesting 47 00:03:41,859 --> 00:03:44,959 and I could develop a lot of things very fast. 48 00:03:44,959 --> 00:03:47,629 All the different actions go together on one surface, 49 00:03:47,629 --> 00:03:50,279 so it's a little bit like violence in a movie, 50 00:03:50,279 --> 00:03:53,139 which kind of accelerates time and compresses time. 51 00:03:53,139 --> 00:03:57,340 So, shortening the process of thinking and acting. 52 00:03:58,240 --> 00:04:01,680 Also, it's without resistance to work on these small formats 53 00:04:01,680 --> 00:04:05,520 as opposed to the large pieces where the material resistance is very strong 54 00:04:05,520 --> 00:04:09,960 and makes the painting less fluid and mobile. 55 00:04:11,920 --> 00:04:15,159 What I'm doing with my work is to kind of grasp some of those 56 00:04:15,159 --> 00:04:18,090 fast thoughts that run through my brain, 57 00:04:18,090 --> 00:04:20,870 and maybe painting is one of the ways to actually 58 00:04:20,870 --> 00:04:24,670 make those visible and understandable for myself.