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Diana Al-Hadid Plays the Classics | ART21 "New York Close Up"

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    [audio book narration playing from stereo
    system]
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    --"The artist Mihailov was, as always, at
    work when the cards of Count Vronsky and Golenishtchev
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    were brought to him."
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    [New York Close Up]
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    --"In the morning he had been working in his
    studio at his big picture."
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    --"Never did he work with such fervour and
    success as when things went ill with him."
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    [Diana Al-Hadid, Artist]
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    --"He was making a sketch for the figure of
    a man in a violent rage."
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    --"A sketch had been made before, but he was
    dissatisfied with it."
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    I think I have to start here.
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    --"The paper with the discarded sketch on
    it was found,"
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    ["Diana Al-Hadid Plays the Classics"]
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    --"But it was dirty, and spotted with candle-grease."
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    --"Still, he took the sketch, laid it on his
    table, and, moving a little away,
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    screwing up his eyes, he fell to gazing at it."
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    --"All at once he smiled and gesticulated
    gleefully."
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    I love storytelling,
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    and I love stories,
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    and I love novels and characters.
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    But, there's a part of me that resists that
    kind of specificity.
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    I like to hold back and be more ambiguous.
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    I think all of my work is kind of like how
    I draw.
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    It's just a lot of build up,
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    a lot of little parts,
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    a lot of construction--
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    taking away and cutting and adding and pasting
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    and bending an morphing something.
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    I'm very physical with my work.
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    I think it's mostly driven by temperament.
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    My work isn't really one decision that's stable;
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    it's a lot of interwoven and fluctuating decisions.
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    And that's why it permits me a different kind
    of brain activity--
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    like, I can listen to Anna Karenina and not
    be disrupted.
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    [audio book continues]
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    --"Chapter 12."
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    --"He had positively forgotten that picture
    he had painted three years ago."
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    --"He had forgotten all the agonies and the
    ecstasies he had lived through with that picture"
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    --"when for several months it had been the
    one thought haunting him day and night."
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    --"He had forgotten, as he always forgot,
    the pictures he had finished."
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    So much of the visual vocabulary of the sculptures
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    came from wanting to dissolve the work--
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    dissolve as much mass as I could from the
    object.
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    These drips, right?
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    These drips that are kind of suspended in
    isolation.
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    When I realized that I had this capacity to
    make this surface liquid--
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    or to make it kind of seem like it's still
    moving--
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    then I thought, "Whoa, that's an opportunity
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    to really think about image building with this material."
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    [audio book continues]
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    --"The figure from a lifeless imagined thing had become living, and such that it could never be changed."
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    --"That figure lived, and was clearly and
    unmistakably defined."
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    With every project, I'm kind of asking,
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    "How can I re-think this process that I've
    become familiar with?"
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    So, when the images all kind of, let's say,
    glued up together--
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    when it's all set and ready and dry and we
    can take it off,
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    we peel it off the wall and it pops off.
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    Those become dimensional things.
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    It's actually such a textured process.
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    I don't really know how people read it; but, it's not an image anymore, it's an object.
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    [audio book continues]
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    --"He did not believe that his picture was
    better than all the pictures of Raphael,"
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    --"but he knew that what he tried to convey
    in that picture,"
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    --"no one ever had conveyed."
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    --"But other people’s criticisms, whatever they might be, had yet immense consequence in his eyes."
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    Sometimes when people know the source material,
    they're like,
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    "Ah, that's what that means!"
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    Or, "That must have this, kind of, you know,
    'A-plus-B-equals' significance."
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    And I want to slow down the interpretation
    a little bit.
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    Not having grown up in a Christian home,
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    I don't always know the, kind of, biblical story
    about those paintings.
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    It feels like they're so generous,
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    and so they allow anyone to take from them.
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    It's part of my history--
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    it's part of everyone's history.
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    [OHWOW Gallery, Los Angeles]
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    [Diana Al-Hadid: "Ground and Figures"]
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    I kind of just steal the compositions--
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    like, the bare, skeletal, faintest...
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    but I obliterate everything else.
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    The details are gone.
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    Nothing is stable.
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    Everything is moving and dripping and messy.
Title:
Diana Al-Hadid Plays the Classics | ART21 "New York Close Up"
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"New York Close Up" series
Duration:
06:11

English subtitles

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