WEBVTT 00:00:00.676 --> 00:00:03.303 [film reel] 00:00:03.303 --> 00:00:25.943 [percussion and horn music] 00:00:28.994 --> 00:00:29.795 Excuse me. 00:00:30.829 --> 00:00:37.579 [background street sounds] 00:00:44.124 --> 00:00:47.605 It's fun to be in the street, like, pushing something 00:00:47.605 --> 00:00:49.784 and making people get out of your way. 00:00:49.784 --> 00:00:52.575 [laughing] 00:00:54.791 --> 00:00:58.095 I think pushing things in carts is just city living. 00:00:59.815 --> 00:01:02.736 Like, there's no car culture here in New York. 00:01:04.186 --> 00:01:05.906 And I think it's already inherently understood, 00:01:05.906 --> 00:01:09.354 she's working slash she's an artist. 00:01:10.475 --> 00:01:11.966 What are ya'll doin? 00:01:11.966 --> 00:01:13.845 Oh, you're doing an art documentary? 00:01:13.845 --> 00:01:15.066 Good luck to you. 00:01:15.666 --> 00:01:18.537 [rattling] 00:01:18.537 --> 00:01:20.046 Alright, alright. 00:01:28.167 --> 00:01:32.537 I'm interesting in telling invisible histories, 00:01:32.537 --> 00:01:36.848 about groups of people that occupied a space that no longer exists. 00:01:36.848 --> 00:01:39.606 Like the 400 year old history here in Harlem 00:01:39.606 --> 00:01:43.673 is just the original natives being displaced up to this very moment. 00:01:43.878 --> 00:01:47.889 But, they helped shaped the place into what it is now. 00:01:48.658 --> 00:01:51.658 [background street sounds] 00:01:51.658 --> 00:01:56.697 Nobody would know that 123 West 131st Street 00:01:56.697 --> 00:02:01.418 was a boarding house and that my grandfather was born and raised in. 00:02:01.418 --> 00:02:05.529 And now it's the ugliest building on the block. 00:02:05.529 --> 00:02:11.698 This salmon colored thing that was selling for $500,000. 00:02:11.698 --> 00:02:13.478 For one apartment in the building. 00:02:13.478 --> 00:02:14.610 It's like, gimme a break. 00:02:16.779 --> 00:02:21.178 I'm not 100% sure on background information on my grandfather, 00:02:21.178 --> 00:02:23.730 and I don't know how much clarity he had himself. 00:02:26.070 --> 00:02:28.950 I know that he was raised by an elder couple. 00:02:28.950 --> 00:02:32.800 and their names were Mari and Count DeVille, 00:02:32.800 --> 00:02:36.080 so you know, good luck finding that on Ancestry.com. 00:02:37.180 --> 00:02:42.140 I think maybe that's what placing those heads in the street was about, 00:02:42.140 --> 00:02:45.516 kind of reclaiming of a space, or of a territory. 00:02:47.926 --> 00:02:54.101 [rattling] 00:02:54.113 --> 00:02:58.933 [background street sounds] 00:03:01.291 --> 00:03:03.181 My grandmother lived across the street. 00:03:03.181 --> 00:03:07.320 And so that's how she met my grandfather and, um, made my daddy. 00:03:07.320 --> 00:03:10.761 So, I just chose a space that could potentially have been 00:03:10.761 --> 00:03:12.891 the brownstone that she lived in. 00:03:14.810 --> 00:03:18.592 My grandmother's family came from Richmond, Virginia 00:03:18.592 --> 00:03:21.762 in the '30s and '40s, so they were part of the Great Migration. 00:03:23.352 --> 00:03:27.741 Just like the wave of 6 million African Americans moving from the South 00:03:27.741 --> 00:03:31.602 to Northern cities and West, looking for better opportunities. 00:03:31.602 --> 00:03:39.411 And, here we are hundred years later, and now there's holes all over Harlem, 00:03:39.411 --> 00:03:41.592 like building sites of new things. 00:03:42.843 --> 00:03:46.443 It sort of feels like the Earth is shifting and moving 00:03:46.443 --> 00:03:50.354 and things are being razed and leveled and new things are being built 00:03:50.354 --> 00:03:52.811 and old things are being done away with. 00:03:54.064 --> 00:03:55.525 New groups of people are moving in 00:03:55.525 --> 00:03:57.204 and old groups of people are being pushed out, 00:03:57.204 --> 00:04:01.653 so, it's almost like migratory patterns of birds or something. 00:04:05.983 --> 00:04:06.954 You're witnessing history. 00:04:08.563 --> 00:04:14.313 [cart rattling] 00:04:14.313 --> 00:04:18.525 [unintelligible speaking] 00:04:24.263 --> 00:04:32.135 There is an African burial ground somewhere near 126th Street 00:04:32.135 --> 00:04:35.994 and the base of the Willis Avenue bridge. 00:04:35.994 --> 00:04:38.564 It seems to be some strange staging ground 00:04:38.564 --> 00:04:42.485 for emergency vehicles and police presence, continuously. 00:04:43.215 --> 00:04:44.355 [crash] 00:04:46.554 --> 00:04:51.475 It's just and odd in between place, that hasn't found meaning yet. 00:04:51.475 --> 00:04:54.136 That they haven't been able to turn into something depressing, 00:04:54.157 --> 00:04:59.946 like a Whole Foods, or a, uh, a condo. 00:04:59.946 --> 00:05:01.056 A condo sliver. 00:05:02.256 --> 00:05:06.725 [tape ripping] 00:05:07.998 --> 00:05:10.596 I've been thinking about that site for a long time. 00:05:10.596 --> 00:05:14.197 So this is my first pass at it. 00:05:14.776 --> 00:05:16.777 It's just an exercise of acknowledgment. 00:05:19.948 --> 00:05:22.437 [rustling] 00:05:22.437 --> 00:05:26.758 All I kept thinking about was these bodies with no names and no faces. 00:05:26.758 --> 00:05:31.388 These bodies that weren't cared about while they were here, 00:05:31.388 --> 00:05:34.178 and still aren't cared about. 00:05:36.147 --> 00:05:39.567 I was trying to invoke a human kind of presence. 00:05:42.237 --> 00:05:48.187 [background street sounds] 00:05:48.187 --> 00:05:52.348 I think of trash as a record of existence. 00:05:52.348 --> 00:05:55.118 That these things were used by people. 00:05:57.168 --> 00:05:59.987 They're the archaeological evidence of the present moment. 00:06:01.798 --> 00:06:03.098 History is permeating everything. 00:06:03.417 --> 00:06:05.238 Whether you know it or not. 00:06:09.369 --> 00:06:14.359 I think trash is the absolute perfect response for talking about that space 00:06:14.359 --> 00:06:17.339 because that's how those people were treated. 00:06:19.940 --> 00:06:21.539 That's how that site is being treated. 00:06:23.240 --> 00:06:27.629 [child laughing] 00:06:42.859 --> 00:06:46.000 I think it's important to acknowledge the people that went behind you. 00:06:47.079 --> 00:06:52.810 Even if they lived the most mundane life, decisions they made 00:06:52.810 --> 00:06:55.162 are the reason why you exist. 00:06:55.781 --> 00:06:58.701 'Cause my gran'ma thought my grandad was cute. 00:06:59.862 --> 00:07:02.601 She got knocked up with my dad, you know? 00:07:03.291 --> 00:07:05.212 Like, if she didn't think the dude across the street 00:07:05.212 --> 00:07:08.221 was cute with his straight hair, you know, I wouldn't be here. 00:07:09.051 --> 00:07:15.642 I don't think things are just...random, they're not. 00:07:17.491 --> 00:07:29.202 [street sounds] [music]