Return to Video

Avery Singer's Next Painting | Art21 "New York Close Up"

  • 0:04 - 0:07
    [SUBWAY TRACKS RUMBLING OVERHEAD]
  • 0:08 - 0:10
    ["New York Close Up"]
  • 0:14 - 0:15
    There’s some expression:
  • 0:16 - 0:19
    "Your best ideas come to you in the shower,"
  • 0:19 - 0:22
    "in transit,
    and as you're about to go to sleep."
  • 0:24 - 0:29
    I haven’t stopped thinking about what the
    next painting is.
  • 0:33 - 0:36
    I feel incredibly free
    when I have an art idea.
  • 0:39 - 0:41
    Being an artist is almost like
  • 0:41 - 0:43
    a pursuit of this feeling of freedom.
  • 0:43 - 0:45
    [Avery Singer, Artist]
  • 0:45 - 0:46
    I love that feeling.
  • 0:46 - 0:47
    I live for that.
  • 0:58 - 1:04
    ["Avery Singer's Next Painting"]
  • 1:17 - 1:23
    I’ve been predominantly making
    these SketchUp models
  • 1:23 - 1:28
    on the computer, as a way of producing
    a sketch for a painting.
  • 1:28 - 1:30
    These sort of bad architectural models
  • 1:30 - 1:34
    that are these semi-figurative scenarios.
  • 1:34 - 1:38
    I just get basic line and detail information
    from that
  • 1:38 - 1:40
    and project it large scale,
  • 1:40 - 1:42
    sketch it out on the canvas,
  • 1:42 - 1:46
    and then realize the painting using airbrush.
  • 1:57 - 1:59
    The way that paintings are made
  • 1:59 - 2:02
    is almost the content, you know?
  • 2:02 - 2:04
    I would like to keep it a bit more vague
  • 2:04 - 2:07
    and explore things with the technique.
  • 2:07 - 2:09
    Because the technique tells its own story.
  • 2:16 - 2:22
    You can take traditional tools
    and employ them
  • 2:22 - 2:27
    in the way that they’ve been intended to
    be employed for 500 years.
  • 2:27 - 2:30
    And then, in the next hour, you know,
  • 2:30 - 2:34
    incorporate some kind of new technology
  • 2:34 - 2:38
    that bears no relationship upon the gesso
    that is, you know,
  • 2:38 - 2:40
    something that's been used for however long
  • 2:40 - 2:43
    and comes out of a recipe that was
    invented in Italy
  • 2:43 - 2:45
    who knows how long ago.
  • 2:45 - 2:49
    The juxtaposition of all these things
    produces meaning.
  • 2:50 - 2:53
    I try to kind of put things side by side that...
  • 2:54 - 2:56
    may have never been seen together before
  • 2:56 - 2:58
    to produce a new relationship
  • 2:58 - 3:02
    or just to produce a new visual reality.
  • 3:16 - 3:20
    I think by 11 or 12, I was already in love
    with art.
  • 3:22 - 3:26
    And then by the time I was 16, it was just,
    like, unequivocal.
  • 3:26 - 3:29
    I was like,
    "I know that this is what I have to do."
  • 3:29 - 3:30
    "I have to go to Cooper Union."
  • 3:33 - 3:36
    I grew up here in New York.
  • 3:36 - 3:39
    And my parents are artists as well.
  • 3:39 - 3:43
    So I grew up in a loft where half of it is
    their art studio--
  • 3:43 - 3:46
    the other half is, kind of, open-plan apartment.
  • 3:46 - 3:47
    So growing up,
  • 3:48 - 3:51
    my room was basically a loft bed above my
    Mom's studio.
  • 3:51 - 3:54
    So that was how I was used to living.
  • 3:54 - 3:56
    My parents use Golden paint.
  • 3:56 - 4:00
    And so I only use Golden paint.
  • 4:01 - 4:02
    This company.
  • 4:04 - 4:05
    You know.
  • 4:06 - 4:11
    So I’m like a second generation
    Golden paints painter.
  • 4:11 - 4:12
    [LAUGHS]
  • 4:13 - 4:16
    The joke is: everyday of my childhood,
  • 4:16 - 4:19
    my dad would just stand in front of me
  • 4:19 - 4:22
    and intimidatingly, kind of,
  • 4:22 - 4:24
    do this, like, finger-wagging thing.
  • 4:24 - 4:25
    [LAUGHS]
  • 4:25 - 4:27
    And say, “Never become an artist.
  • 4:27 - 4:28
    "Don’t become an artist."
  • 4:28 - 4:29
    "Marry a millionaire."
  • 4:32 - 4:33
    [INTERVIEWER, OFF SCREEN]
    How’s that working out?
  • 4:33 - 4:34
    [LAUGHS]
  • 4:34 - 4:36
    "No" on both counts!
  • 4:43 - 4:44
    I don’t know what it is,
  • 4:44 - 4:46
    but I just love solitude.
  • 4:46 - 4:48
    And I love working alone,
  • 4:48 - 4:51
    and defining my own time,
  • 4:51 - 4:53
    and my own life, and my own space.
  • 4:54 - 4:55
    You don’t look at the clock anymore
  • 4:55 - 4:57
    and then all of a sudden the sun is down
  • 4:57 - 5:00
    and you realize you've been painting
    for fourteen hours
  • 5:00 - 5:03
    and you have this progress in front of you.
  • 5:05 - 5:07
    This is your task--
  • 5:07 - 5:11
    this what makes being an artist so hard.
  • 5:12 - 5:16
    Because I don’t want to reproduce other
    people's paintings.
  • 5:16 - 5:18
    I want to make my own.
Title:
Avery Singer's Next Painting | Art21 "New York Close Up"
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"New York Close Up" series
Duration:
05:41

English subtitles

Revisions