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Jordan Casteel Paints Her Community | Art21 "New York Close Up"

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    [New York Close Up]
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    ["Jordan Casteel Paints Her Community"]
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    [JORDAN CASTEEL] Hi there.
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    Do you remember me?
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    Do you know where Harold is?
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    Have you seen…
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    Harold?
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    Do you remember that I painted him?
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    I wanted to show him the painting.
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    I gave him my stuff
    so he could get in contact with me,
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    but I haven't seen him back out here.
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    [MAN] I haven’t seen him in a while.
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    [CASTEEL] Okay, if I ever saw him then...
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    [MAN] I haven’t seen him in about a year.
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    [CASTEEL] I can email or text it to him.
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    This is like seven foot tall, too.
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    It's big.
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    Get kind of close to your dad.
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    Get like right here.
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    Because this is your dad?
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    Or that’s your dad?
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    Yeah! I love it.
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    Now I see it. That's so good.
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    [MAN] Thank you.
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    [CASTEEL] Yeah, come right here.
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    I want you close to this middle one.
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    [CAMERA SHUTTER CLICKS]
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    Will you put this leg in a little bit?
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    Yeah!
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    I’m just thinking about my canvas.
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    Yeah, that's perfect.
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    [MAN] Thank you.
    [CASTEEL] Look.
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    [MAN] Oh yeah, that’s lovely.
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    [CASTEEL] The summer between my first and
    second year at Yale,
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    I was awarded a grant to get
    ten thousand dollars
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    and to go to Gloucester, Massachusetts
    to do landscape painting.
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    During that time,
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    there was the acquittal of
    the murderer of Trayvon Martin.
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    Gloucester is a very white place,
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    as in I was probably the only brown person
    for miles.
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    So like, there was a sense of isolation
    that I was sort of feeling around that experience.
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    [Home of Jordan’s Aunt]
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    I remember
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    having a phone conversation with my twin brother.
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    My twin was describing being
    in a convenience store
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    and somebody was following him,
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    and he was kind of going on this rant, like,
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    "You know, people follow me like I'm a threat,"
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    "but they don’t even know that I'm a father"
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    "and I'm, like, trying to get my shit together."
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    "They don't know anything about me,"
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    "I'm just the one who's, like,"
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    "going to steal something or whatever."
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    I think I felt at that time
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    that I needed to go back to Yale
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    and do work outside of landscapes--
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    that I needed to find a way to combine
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    my desire to create a sense of
    visibility around
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    my family and my brothers that was feeling
    absent at that time.
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    Let me help you with your ringtone.
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    Record it?
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    [AUNT] We have to record it.
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    Go in the settings and see how you do that.
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    [SINGING]
    ♪ Trump is our enemy. ♪
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    ♪ He must be removed ♪
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    ♪ Trump is our enemy. ♪
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    ♪ He must be removed. ♪
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    ♪ Just like a can of garbage in the alley, ♪
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    ♪ he must be removed. ♪
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    Yeah!
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    [CASTEEL] Okay now we got to test it out,
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    But I think I did it!
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    Okay.
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    [AUNT] Okay, and then you call me,
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    and let's see if this works.
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    [FROM RECORDING]
    ♪ He must be removed. ♪
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    [LAUGHS]
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    [CASTEEL] Everytime the phone rings,
    that's now what it is!
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    So I came back to Yale and was like,
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    "I am going to paint my black men"
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    "Imma do this thing about my family, basically."
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    Nine times out of ten, people think that
    I am a man
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    before they meet me.
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    Even though, like…
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    Yeah, because my name is Jordan
    and I'm painting men.
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    So even at my own openings,
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    the number of times that my mother…
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    I hear my mother across a room being like,
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    "SHE's over there!"
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    And I'm like, "Mom, it's okay."
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    And I think a lot of that has to do with
    historical painting
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    and the notion of who has the right
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    to depict what bodies at what scale.
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    And, I like that.
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    I feel really present in this work as a result.
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    Like, whenever people…
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    There have been some criticisms of:
    I only paint men.
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    And every time people say women are absent,
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    or people are like, "When are you going to
    paint women?"
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    I'm like, I don’t know if I feel absence,
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    because I’m very much a part of this work,
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    and it's translated through my experience.
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    So, these nudes happened,
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    which was horrifying.
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    And I got a lot of criticism, sort of,
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    during that time around it.
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    Because I was making some pretty
    intentional and dramatic moves,
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    such as not showing the genitalia,
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    which was always a thing.
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    But I was really interested in humanizing
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    in a history that is often
    criminalized and sexualized.
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    So, I didn’t want the black male body
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    to be taken advantage of
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    any more than historically it has been.
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    So that was like a gesture of
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    not allowing people to have
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    what they felt like they deserved
    from the body.
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    [STUDENT] To consume the body...
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    [CASTEEL] Yeah, exactly.
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    Yeah, of course.
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    Thank you, guys!
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    Best of luck to you as well.
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    [SOUNDS OF DJEMBE DRUMMING]
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    There was some conversation about
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    my paintings being surrogates for my brother.
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    And it was when that conversation
    came up that
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    I first was like, "Oh, you’re maybe right."
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    "Like, maybe I need to go to the source of
    all of this."
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    "Maybe it's time for me to actually paint
    my twin."
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    [RECORDING] One, two, three…
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    [MUSIC BEGINS PLAYING]
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    [MAN, OFF SCREEN] Turn up!
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    [LAUGHTER]
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    [CASTEEL] I never heard this song.
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    [WOMAN, OFF SCREEN] What!?
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    [WOMAN] Oh, we do know this!
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    [MAN] The fact that y'all
    all dancing to this song,
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    like it's, like…
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    I've never heard this song in my life.
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    [ALL LAUGH]
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    [MAN]: Let’s get the hottest rappers around
    right now.
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    Lil Yachty!
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    [ALL LAUGH]
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    [WOMAN] Lil Yachty!
    Oh my God!
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    [MAN] See?
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    [MAN] I feel like I’m doing like a…
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    [WOMAN] Like a belly dance, yes!
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    [WOMAN] You have such an emotional connection...
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    Like, the moments when you decide to photograph.
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    Like, with the twins, like, all of a sudden,
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    they're lifted in a way that's like…
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    I don’t know how to…
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    [CASTEEL] Well that wasn't an intentional
    photograph.
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    Like, I was photographing Charles,
    the fur guy.
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    And this woman pushed her babies in front
    of my camera
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    and was like, "Photograph my babies!"
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    [ALL LAUGH]
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    [CASTEEL] No, literally.
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    And I was like, what?
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    Okay?
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    And I took one shot.
    Like it was literally, like, click.
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    And I was like, "Oh they're so cute,
    are they twins?"
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    And she was like "Yeah they are,"
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    and then just like ran off.
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    [MAN] Wow…
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    [WOMAN] Did you tell her you're a twin?
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    [CASTEEL] Yeah, I was like
    "Oh, I'm a twin too,"
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    "So maybe I, like, noticed that or something."
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    And she was like, “Oh, okay that makes sense,"
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    And then she kind of, like, ran off.
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    [MAN] And have you found her since then?
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    [CASTEEL] No! No.
    I have no idea.
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    When we were really young,
    we were really, really close.
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    And then we went to high school,
    and we were both...
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    We went from this all white,
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    private middle school
    from first to eighth grade,
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    where we were the only two black kids,
    basically, in the whole school.
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    And we transferred in high school
    to our local public high school.
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    And both of us experienced some bullying,
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    I think, because we were coming from
    a different background
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    than a lot of the other students.
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    [MAN] It’s like I'm, like,
    setting it down though.
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    [CASTEEL] Yeah! Yeah.
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    Well, here, maybe sit in front of it,
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    then I can do a close up of y'all sitting
    in front of it.
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    Would that be cool?
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    [CAMERA SHUTTER CLICKS]
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    The way that I dealt with that was I made
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    cookie cutter peanut butter and jelly sandwiches,
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    and I would sit outside of
    my favorite teacher's classroom--
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    on the floor, during lunch--
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    and eat my cookie cutter sandwiches.
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    But my twin, on the other hand,
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    was bullied more physically.
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    I think he literally had to, like,
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    become tougher.
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    And a lot of that had to do with
    societal expectations.
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    I only feel like…
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    I just, in at least a public sense,
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    I get really conscious…
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    His story is not mine to tell.
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    And I can only speak from the perspective
    of his sister.
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    And somebody who's seen him as
    this really funny
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    sensitive, charismatic,
    loving young man,
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    and recognizing that the world
    perceives him differently.
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    And as a result,
    this work, I think, really comes from
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    my desire to share
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    what I have known with the world.
Title:
Jordan Casteel Paints Her Community | Art21 "New York Close Up"
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"New York Close Up" series
Duration:
09:41

English subtitles

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