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Jack Whitten: An Artist's Life | Art21 "Extended Play"

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    [sound of tools being sharpened]
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    ["Jack Whitten: An Artist's Life"]
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    Now I find myself doing a type of painting
    where my hand doesn't touch it.
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    This is an adaptation of the artist's palette.
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    Okay.
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    About ready to go.
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    Each one of these carries information--
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    it's compressed into each one--
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    because it relates so much to
    what's happening with modern technology.
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    You know, bytes of information.
    Bits.
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    That kind of a thing.
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    I can build anything I want to build.
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    I'm not a narrative painter.
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    I don't do the idea, or the painting
    being the illustration of an idea,
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    I don't do that.
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    It's all about the materiality of the paint.
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    I grew up in Bessemer, Alabama.
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    Everything was segregated--
    transportation, the buses.
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    What I call American apartheid.
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    I always did art.
    I always did painting since I was a kid.
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    But it was not encouraged,
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    the theory being that it's good for a hobby,
    but you couldn't make a living out of it.
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    Lucky for me, I graduated with good grades.
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    I went to Tuskegee.
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    The idea was for me to be a doctor
    in the U.S. Air Force and a pilot.
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    It was always in the back of my mind
    that I was an artist.
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    That's what I wanted to do,
    I wanted to do artwork.
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    Tuskegee did not have an art program,
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    so I left Tuskegee to study art at Southern
    University.
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    And that went well, for a while,
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    but I got involved politically with the demonstrations.
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    We organized a big civil rights march
    that went from
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    downtown Baton Rouge to the state office building.
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    It was that march, what I experienced,
    is what drove me out of the South.
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    After that march,
    which turned vicious and violent,
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    that politically changed me forever.
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    The fall of 1960,
    I took a Greyhound bus from New Orleans
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    to take the test at Cooper Union.
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    And I was accepted.
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    I studied art--painting.
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    It was a good thing
    and it was tuition-free.
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    When I came to New York,
    some of the first people I met was
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    Romare Bearden,
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    Norman Lewis,
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    and Jacob Lawrence.
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    And in 1960 in New York City,
    the scene was open.
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    Bill de Kooning would talk to you!
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    I had a dialogue,
    what I call, on both sides of the divide.
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    I don't make a distinction between
    there being Black, White, and whatever.
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    I really don't.
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    If they've got information
    and my instincts tell me,
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    "Boy, you got to meet that person"--
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    "You got to find out what they're doing,"
    "you have to understand this stuff"--
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    I'd reach out.
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    The young artist has to
    have something to react to.
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    My first influence was Arshile Gorky.
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    Nobody springs forth from the head of Zeus!
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    That was my first influence.
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    Early surrealism.
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    Figurative expressionism.
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    It wasn't until the end of the '60s, though,
    that I made a drastic change
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    toward more conceptual ideas
    that dealt with the materiality of paint.
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    I removed all the spectrum color.
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    Made a big move to acrylic.
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    Restructured the studio.
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    Restructured my thinking about painting.
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    I built a tool.
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    I called it "the developer."
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    With that tool,
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    I could move large bodies of acrylic paint
    across the surface of the canvas.
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    I call them "slab" paintings.
    S-L-A-B.
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    It became a slab.
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    I wanted a painting to exist as a single line--
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    one gesture, three seconds.
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    That's why I built that big tool.
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    I spent ten years working on that drawing
    board.
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    Ten years bent over, stooped down.
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    I can't do that no more.
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    There comes a time when the body
    will not accept that type of abuse--
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    and it was abuse.
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    The slab is what led me into the tesserae.
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    It's a chunk of acrylic that has been cut
    from a large slab of acrylic.
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    My interest, of course, is always about
    how I can use it to direct the light.
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    So with these surfaces,
    depending on how I place them,
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    I can direct the light.
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    You see how it changes?
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    That painting came out of a lot of pain.
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    I started that painting
    and then I developed a serious illness.
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    I spent a month in the hospital.
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    So that knocked me on my ass.
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    And that painting was a way of hitting back.
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    [LAUGHS]
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    I'm not going to let this shit defeat me,
    you know?
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    It's one of the "Black Monoliths."
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    It's called,
    "Six Kinky Strings: For Chuck Berry."
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    And that title comes from the fact that,
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    anybody who knows about the personality
    of Chuck Berry, he did some weird shit.
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    The "Black Monolith" is a series of paintings that
    I've been doing for a number of years, though.
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    It started back in the early '80s.
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    It's a Black person who has
    contributed a lot to society.
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    So I make it my business
    to memorialize those people.
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    And I find that each one,
    I have to locate the essence of that person.
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    That person becomes a symbol
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    and I build that into the paint.
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    I want to be remembered
    as a very average guy
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    who pretty much stays to himself.
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    [LAUGHS]
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    Dedicated worker.
    But on top of that...
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    The question was asked to Count Basie once,
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    he says, "I just want to go down as
    one of the boys."
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    There was a kind of a modesty in that
    that I've always admired.
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    Nothing big,
    just one of the boys.
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    I like that.
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    ["Quantum Wall, VIII (For Arshile Gorky, My
    First Love In Painting)"]
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    [Jack Whitten (1939–2018), In Memoriam]
Title:
Jack Whitten: An Artist's Life | Art21 "Extended Play"
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"Extended Play" series
Duration:
09:19

English subtitles

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