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Ellen Gallagher: Projections | Art21 "Exclusive"

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    You know, do you remember
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    those viewfinders from the 70s?
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    I was really into that,
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    and I had viewfinders
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    and I had a projector.
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    I was allowed to bring boys up to my room
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    IF I was going to show them
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    these projections I had.
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    So that was really exciting.
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    I really liked showing these projections
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    in the dark and telling stories.
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    There were types of stories
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    that were supposed to go with them,
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    but I would change the order
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    and make up other stories.
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    That was a very calm moment for me,
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    these stories I would make up.
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    The Red Baron was a favorite one.
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    [Laughs]
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    And then mixed with, if you can imagine,
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    the story about Bessie Smith
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    and her car accident, that she wasn't able
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    to get to the hospital
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    --or she was able to get to the hospital,
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    and they wouldn’t take care of her.
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    So these slides would all get
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    jumbled together and would end up being
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    part of my slide show and my narration.
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    [Laughs]
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    And you know, it kept people really quiet.
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    I mean, usually I was really territorial
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    and really fighting with boys
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    from my neighborhood a lot,
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    and they were very
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    --at least momentarily--
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    obedient and quiet and listening.
Title:
Ellen Gallagher: Projections | Art21 "Exclusive"
Description:

Episode #054: Artist Ellen Gallagher recounts her childhood obsession with projecting films, paired with documentation of her work "Murmur" (2003-04) installed at Gagosian Gallery in New York.

Repetition and revision are central to Ellen Gallagher's treatment of advertisements appropriated from popular magazines. Initially, Gallagher was drawn to wig advertisements because of their grid-like structure. Later she realized that it was the accompanying language that attracted her, and she began to bring these narratives into her painting, making them function through the characters of the advertisements as a kind of chart of lost worlds. Upon closer inspection, googly eyes, reconfigured wigs, tongues, and lips of minstrel caricatures multiply in detail. Although her work has often been interpreted as an examination of race, Gallagher also suggests a more formal reading: from afar, the work appears abstract and minimal, and employs grids as both structure and metaphors for experience.

Learn more about Ellen Gallagher:
http://www.art21.org/artists/ellen-gallagher

VIDEO | Producer: Wesley Miller & Nick Ravich. Interview: Susan Sollins. Camera & Sound: Tom Hurwitz, Eddie Marritz, Mark Mandler, and Roger Phenix. Editor: Jenny Chiurco and Mary Ann Toman. Artwork Courtesy: Ellen Gallagher & Edgar Cleijne. Special Thanks: Gagosian Gallery, New York and Two Palms Press, New York.

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Video Language:
English, British
Team:
Art21
Project:
"Extended Play" series
Duration:
01:50

English subtitles

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