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Heidi Lau’s Spirit Vessels | Art21 "New York Close Up”

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    (upbeat music)
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    - [Heidi] Sometimes I
    feel like it's the clay
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    telling me what to do.
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    And I just submit to
    this very cruel mistress.
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    (suspenseful music)
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    It really feels like I am the medium.
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    Something passes through me or
    my hands directed by the clay.
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    Instead of me sculpting it,
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    it's like it's sculpting me back.
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    (Heidi laughing)
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    It's like a conduit for spirits.
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    My name is Heidi Lau and I'm a sculptor
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    and I work primarily in clay.
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    (birds chirping)
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    Working in clay, literally
    the most gentle touch
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    you put on it becomes
    embedded into the material.
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    It's just continuous
    making layers upon layers.
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    Everything I've learned I just taught
    myself. I think the only technique
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    that I use is just scoring
    the clay, putting slip on it
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    and then attaching the work.
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    The hands are probably one of the
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    (Heidi laughs)
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    longest running elements
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    in my work.
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    I will never cast a real hand
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    you know, they kind of all like
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    ghostly and they're elongated,
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    to signify that it doesn't
    come from this world.
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    Yeah, so this is a preliminary sketch
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    for my project at the catacomb
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    and so this is the arch.
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    The piece would hang from the
    skylight down to the floor.
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    (soft music)
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    There's a lot of urns
    with drapery on top.
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    It's kind of a symbol for mourning
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    and I've been wanting to capture that.
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    (calm music)
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    I grew up in Macau,
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    my childhood oscillates between
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    very strict Chinese parenting
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    and also me escaping my
    household and having adventures
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    in lot of ruins while it was
    still a colony of Portugal.
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    The Portuguese has built
    a lot of cathedrals
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    and there are a lot of
    colonial style houses.
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    I would spend a lot of time
    wandering into the structures.
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    I'm trying to capture that essence
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    of structures you could get lost into.
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    (soft music)
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    (bell ringing)
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    (car hoots)
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    - Hi
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    - [Heidi] Wing on Wo is a ceramic store
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    in Chinatown and it's actually one
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    of the oldest running
    business in all Manhattan.
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    I became friends with the
    owner Mei, five years ago.
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    As soon as I stepped into the store,
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    it just felt so familiar to me
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    'cause I had grew up in a
    very similar environment.
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    I see Chinese diaspora quite similar
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    to the way I see how Mei runs her store.
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    Rethinking how ceramics
    could be interpreted,
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    or reintroduced to contemporary times.
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    If I could close my eyes,
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    I could even see like the books
    my grandpa had on the shelf
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    like his garden.
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    While it's looking in the past,
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    it's also kind of like,
    gives me a lot of like energy
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    to create work both
    for now and the future.
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    And that's why I want to
    bring you this to like
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    'cause I want the actual
    elements to kind of reference.
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    (calm music)
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    I started thinking about using clay
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    to make a burial garment
    after my mom passed away.
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    As a way to grieve,
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    I began to look at a lot of burial objects
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    from Han and Qin dynasty
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    and also watching a lot
    of Chinese zombie movies.
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    (Heidi laughs)
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    (suspenseful music)
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    It feels right to grieve with my hands
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    doing this very labor
    intensive, almost the most
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    impractical thing you can
    think of to do with clay.
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    The labor of it equals grieving.
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    (calm music)
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    (birds chirping)
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    I started taking very long
    walks during the residency
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    and that's kind of how the project
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    at the catacomb
    started taking shape slowly
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    through this aimless, meditative walks.
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    It's a daily exercise for myself to empty
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    out my own ego when I am
    able to get to that state
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    at the time that I could
    access this ancestral plane
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    and find my way on the other side.
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    (calm music)
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    (chains clink)
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    - Got it.
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    (coins clink)
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    - I see my work kind of as,
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    touch points between very opposing ideas
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    between human and spiritual unknown.
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    (calm upbeat music)
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    I feel like at the core
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    of me making work about
    grief is putting emotion
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    into clay and really listening to it.
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    It becomes something
    familiar, something beautiful.
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    (calm upbeat music)
Title:
Heidi Lau’s Spirit Vessels | Art21 "New York Close Up”
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"New York Close Up" series
Duration:
08:03

English subtitles

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