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Doreen Garner on Her Own Terms | Art21 "New York Close Up"

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    - [Doreen Garner] I've been
    having more conversations
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    with God in the morning and you know,
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    it's usually you know smoke like a joint
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    and then talk in a mirror.
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    A lot of my most impactful works
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    are through those conversations.
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    Since lockdown I've changed
    material tone a lot,
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    you know, I've been really aware of
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    how Black people are viewing like
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    Black bodies in public spaces,
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    especially if they like allude
    to any type of violence.
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    So, you know, my sculptures
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    usually end up looking pretty violent or
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    grotesque or however you
    want to describe them.
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    And so I didn't want to trigger anybody
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    more so than before COVID and
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    ways that Black death was
    broadcasted on TV last year.
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    So I'm kind of changing tone materially.
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    I'm working more with white flesh and
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    disease and toxicity.
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    - [Doreen Garner] Yeah
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    (Doreen laughs)
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    (suspenseful fast paced music)
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    Right now,
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    I'm doing some castings
    for a piece I'm working on
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    it's, it's a series,
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    but I'm starting two of the flags
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    and they're made out of flesh.
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    It's supposed to be white
    diseased skin on the front
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    composing colonizing country flags,
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    and then Black bodies on the backside
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    that are kind of bloody and piled up.
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    The two flags I'm working on right now,
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    it's the British flag. And
    then the flag of Portugal.
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    - [Doreen Garner] Those are
    just two of a few countries
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    that were leading in the
    transatlantic slave trade.
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    These two pieces are going
    to a solo show in Austria,
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    and I don't want to put a
    bunch of bloody Black bodies
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    just by themselves as
    entertainment. So I want them
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    to think about ways that their whiteness,
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    adds to racism experienced
    throughout the globe,
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    regardless of whether they think
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    that they're involved or not.
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    A lot of Europeans are like, no,
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    we don't do that over
    here. It's like, well,
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    y'all started this shit.
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    This piece is a smallpox piece.
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    And then this one is more syphilis.
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    Working now with white flesh,
    it's been really difficult
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    making the adjustment color-wise.
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    There has been a complete
    shift in my palette
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    and figuring out what looks human.
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    I've been getting so frustrated
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    with trying to get white
    people's skin tone right.
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    And I was explaining
    this to my friend Nene,
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    and she was like, oh, you know,
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    I totally feel you because for so long,
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    they've gotten our skin tone wrong.
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    And it just sent chills because
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    I think about all the
    ways that Black people
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    have been misrepresented aesthetically
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    and they're totally wrong and offensive.
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    And so it's really crazy for me
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    to actively try to get
    their skin tone right,
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    when there hasn't been the
    same amount of consideration
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    in ways that they represent us.
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    The piece that I did for Basel
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    did kind of focus more on whiteness.
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    And focusing on whiteness for that piece,
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    people read as a more
    abstract and you know,
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    that the piece hasn't sold yet,
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    not to say that it won't sell,
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    but just thinking about ways
    that pieces that I've made
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    that have had Black
    bodies have sold faster,
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    you know, something to think about.
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    - [Doreen Garner] I
    mean, that's the thing is
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    I'm not really trying to
    shit on the art world.
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    It just makes me feel viscerally
    uncomfortable sometimes.
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    And that can come in social
    anxiety at exhibition,
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    or staying up all night,
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    trying to prepare files for an application
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    that I might get denied for.
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    And what does that do to me? You know,
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    it's like constantly setting
    up yourself for denial.
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    Seems kind of unhealthy,
    right? Mentally unhealthy.
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    And I think that's why
    I really enjoy tattooing
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    because I don't have to think
    about that stuff anymore.
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    I'm just interacting with that one person
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    for a few hours.
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    It's not rooted in acceptance or denial.
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    - [Doreen Garner] You ready Debbie?
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    - [Debbie Snax] Yeah.
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    - [Doreen Garner] We're gonna put it on.
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    We met on the internet.
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    Debbie is a tattooer from Atlanta
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    and now we're like little tattoo besties.
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    - [Debbie Snax] Being a
    traditional tattooer is mostly a,
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    it's a traditional white
    thing to do. You know?
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    So most of the time, if I
    find people who are kind of
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    on my same level then they're white.
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    So being around Doreen
    has made me want to,
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    not transform myself
    into more Black, but just
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    it's made me more comfortable
    with drawing Black things.
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    - [Doreen] The community that
    I have in the tattoo world,
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    you know they're just more my people.
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    Very weird. You know weird, tattooed.
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    (laughing)
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    - [Doreen] I love it, I love it.
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    - [Off Camera] Oh my god,
    I hate this, I hate this.
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    - Oh my gosh
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    (laughter)
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    - [Debbie Snax] When you
    first became into yourself,
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    did you think you would be a tattooer?
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    - [Doreen Garner] No, I mean, I always,
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    I was always such a shy nerd.
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    And I never thought, I
    mean I had always hoped
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    that I would be covered in tattoos
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    and a lot of gold jewelry.
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    You know, now that it's happening,
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    I'm about it.
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    - [Debbie Snax] Right,
    it's a cute little vibe.
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    - [Doreen Garner] It's a cute little vibe.
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    - [Debbie Snax] Yeah (laughs)
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    [Doreen Garner] Then with tattooing,
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    it allows people to collect my work.
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    You know, they wouldn't
    necessarily be able
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    to buy a 50 inch flag made of flesh
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    and put on their wall, you know.
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    Most of the people that I tattoo
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    have no idea that I'm a sculptor
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    and to what degree my art practice goes.
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    If you are Black, melanated and tattooed,
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    we're going to be taking some photographs
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    of Black people that have tattoos,
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    because there's not a lot of documentation
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    of Black people with tattoos.
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    - [Interviewee] I'm sure,
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    everybody here has been tatted by Doreen.
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    - [Off camera] They have.
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    - [Interviewee] Including yourself?
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    - [Off Camera] No, I'm
    the last one standing.
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    - [Interviewee] This is not good.
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    - [Doreen Garner] You
    know, with my tattoos,
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    I'm just trying to create the images
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    that Black people wanna
    get on their body, forever.
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    Things that they resonate with,
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    things that make them feel beautiful.
Title:
Doreen Garner on Her Own Terms | Art21 "New York Close Up"
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"New York Close Up" series
Duration:
09:00

English subtitles

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