1 00:00:10,173 --> 00:00:15,109 JENNY HOLZER: I like my pieces  to be very short at moments 2 00:00:16,241 --> 00:00:24,107 and other times I want them to be sustained  and capable of holding people’s interest. 3 00:00:27,360 --> 00:00:31,160 Time is an especially important  consideration with the public works 4 00:00:31,160 --> 00:00:34,400 because I know people going  by won’t have much time, 5 00:00:34,400 --> 00:00:37,909 so that’s why I tend to make very short things. 6 00:00:39,680 --> 00:00:44,920 When I’m working indoors I want  to have bounty if you will, 7 00:00:44,920 --> 00:00:51,368 so if someone is willing to lie down on  the floor, that they will be rewarded. 8 00:00:52,480 --> 00:00:59,680 It was more than a little intimidating to  work in the van der Rohe building in Berlin. 9 00:00:59,680 --> 00:01:03,560 It took me a shockingly long  amount of time to figure out that 10 00:01:03,560 --> 00:01:07,960 the building is a roof with glass walls. 11 00:01:07,960 --> 00:01:12,840 Once that came to me, I focused on the  roof by putting the electronics there 12 00:01:12,840 --> 00:01:17,336 and then let the glass walls  give me all those reflections. 13 00:01:21,680 --> 00:01:27,237 I want people to concentrate on the  content of the writing and not who done it. 14 00:01:28,164 --> 00:01:32,720 I want the work to be of utility  to as many people as possible. 15 00:01:32,720 --> 00:01:38,445 And I think if it were attributed  to me, it would be easier to toss. 16 00:01:39,671 --> 00:01:42,520 There are lots of I’s and you’s  in the inflammatory essays, 17 00:01:42,520 --> 00:01:47,980 but they’re not me, they’re many different  voices on a host of unmentionable subjects. 18 00:01:49,360 --> 00:01:51,830 Somebody was kind enough to put top ten favorites, 19 00:01:51,830 --> 00:01:53,529 so let’s see if they’re ours. 20 00:01:55,480 --> 00:02:00,640 That color is less putrid, so how about  “Fear is the most elegant weapon.” 21 00:02:00,640 --> 00:02:02,120 I’ll dig for the next one. 22 00:02:02,120 --> 00:02:04,480 “Rejoice, our times are intolerable.” 23 00:02:04,480 --> 00:02:07,148 Funny how that happens time  and time again. (LAUGH) 24 00:02:07,148 --> 00:02:08,840 SPEAKER: Comes around. HOLZER: There you go. 25 00:02:09,519 --> 00:02:11,600 HOLZER: “The end of the USA”  is probably too vile, right? 26 00:02:11,600 --> 00:02:12,240 SPEAKER: Yeah. 27 00:02:12,240 --> 00:02:17,320 HOLZER: Okay. That even got taken down in Canada, so I guess that’s not happening. 28 00:02:17,320 --> 00:02:22,160 HOLZER: David, they started  out in the little size. 29 00:02:22,160 --> 00:02:29,320 Uhm, we also could use that cause those  were the first ones in the ‘80s and uh, 30 00:02:29,320 --> 00:02:32,960 it would make kind of a different  pattern if we’d go with the little guys, 31 00:02:32,960 --> 00:02:36,400 cause then we could make a  really crazy patchwork thing. 32 00:02:36,400 --> 00:02:37,360 All right. 33 00:02:37,360 --> 00:02:40,800 Well let’s let them marinate in the  basement and we can come back to them. 34 00:02:40,800 --> 00:02:41,601 DAVID: Okay. 35 00:02:43,034 --> 00:02:46,920 HOLZER: The TRUISMS were perhaps  an overly ambitious attempt. 36 00:02:46,920 --> 00:02:50,000 I wanted to have almost every subject represented, 37 00:02:50,947 --> 00:02:52,937 almost every possible point of view. 38 00:02:54,440 --> 00:02:59,263 And then I did have to sort out what  these sentences should appear upon. 39 00:03:05,560 --> 00:03:08,654 I stopped writing my own text in 2001. 40 00:03:08,880 --> 00:03:12,440 I found that I couldn’t say enough adequately 41 00:03:12,440 --> 00:03:16,946 and so it was with great pleasure  that I went to the text of others. 42 00:03:18,840 --> 00:03:22,700 I was invited to make something  for the lobby at 7 World Trade. 43 00:03:23,400 --> 00:03:30,337 And after much stewing, came up with  the idea of doing a text in the wall. 44 00:03:30,337 --> 00:03:34,297 And not memorial text, but text about  the joy of being in New York City. 45 00:03:35,800 --> 00:03:43,680 To make the piece I had to make quite a few  site visits and not only stare at the space, 46 00:03:43,680 --> 00:03:45,167 but walk it and feel it. 47 00:03:46,320 --> 00:03:51,340 The space at 7 World Trade  demanded that I fill the lobby, 48 00:03:52,184 --> 00:03:54,751 and in particular the glass wall. 49 00:03:55,760 --> 00:04:00,491 And so I thought that that text  should flow by, should float by. 50 00:04:00,491 --> 00:04:01,936 And so it did. 51 00:04:03,480 --> 00:04:08,052 It’s never possible to know how things  really will look until they’re up. 52 00:04:09,040 --> 00:04:13,317 So I’m as eager as anyone  else to see how it will be. 53 00:04:16,673 --> 00:04:21,560 The poetics come from the poetry  by others, not from myself. 54 00:04:21,560 --> 00:04:25,680 But what I can contribute is  something like a visual poetics 55 00:04:25,680 --> 00:04:32,809 that can have to do with the color  and the pauses, uhm the omissions. 56 00:04:41,440 --> 00:04:46,880 HOLZER: You know I thought maybe afterwards  we could uhm work on the poem selection. 57 00:04:47,440 --> 00:04:49,509 So if you’re game, that would be really handy. 58 00:04:50,600 --> 00:04:55,390 Henri Cole and I were both fellows  at the American Academy in Berlin. 59 00:05:03,972 --> 00:05:06,440 HENRI COLE: Jenny projected  a poem of mine called Blur. 60 00:05:06,440 --> 00:05:10,680 It’s a sonnet sequence, on the  police headquarters of Venice, 61 00:05:10,680 --> 00:05:14,040 which is across from the Peggy Guggenheim Museum. 62 00:05:14,040 --> 00:05:18,520 I guess it was a building of  fear to Venetians during the war. 63 00:05:18,520 --> 00:05:25,720 And my poem was a...a very  uh, kind of naked love poem 64 00:05:25,720 --> 00:05:32,512 and to project that onto this scary building  was interesting and meaningful and beautiful… 65 00:05:32,512 --> 00:05:34,580 HOLZER: Substituting one  kind of fear for another one. 66 00:05:34,580 --> 00:05:35,308 COLE: Yeah. 67 00:05:35,308 --> 00:05:39,640 HOLZER: Yeah we had two projectors, so  the light crossed over the Grand Canal 68 00:05:39,640 --> 00:05:42,600 and so we would have the same poem on 69 00:05:42,600 --> 00:05:45,820 the Peggy Guggenheim as on the police station. 70 00:05:55,000 --> 00:06:00,785 HOLZER: I started doing the projections in  1996 and have been working on those since. 71 00:06:02,000 --> 00:06:07,400 These are exceptionally powerful  projectors and because they’re so bright, 72 00:06:07,400 --> 00:06:12,846 they let me throw text on rivers of  some size and on giant buildings. 73 00:06:13,299 --> 00:06:17,360 It seems accurate to have the  text legible and so knowable, 74 00:06:17,360 --> 00:06:22,520 and then a second later to disappear  into fractured reflections in 75 00:06:22,520 --> 00:06:24,440 a form that’s almost unrecognizable. 76 00:06:25,243 --> 00:06:28,201 COLE: Can you imagine making art without words? 77 00:06:29,560 --> 00:06:34,360 HOLZER: I’ve done it a few times  and it was a pleasure and a relief. 78 00:06:34,360 --> 00:06:37,145 Uh, or done it with very few words. 79 00:06:37,145 --> 00:06:39,845 HOLZER: Do you want to help me pick Orwell pages? 80 00:06:43,160 --> 00:06:44,240 We want to make a… 81 00:06:44,240 --> 00:06:47,920 a print of some of them and then  also make some into paintings. 82 00:06:47,920 --> 00:06:49,640 So I would like your take on it. 83 00:06:49,640 --> 00:06:50,700 COLE: Uh-hm, I see. 84 00:06:50,700 --> 00:06:54,800 HOLZER: Cause I’ve looked at it a few  times too many and I’m getting blind to it. 85 00:06:54,800 --> 00:06:55,663 COLE: Sure. 86 00:06:57,640 --> 00:06:58,285 HOLZER: Okay. 87 00:07:00,261 --> 00:07:05,680 HOLZER: The Redaction paintings include many  pages that are almost completely blacked out, 88 00:07:05,680 --> 00:07:09,120 that before the documents were  released the government blackened 89 00:07:09,120 --> 00:07:13,480 or excised portions for  security or unknowable reasons. 90 00:07:14,234 --> 00:07:16,480 HOLZER: You know first I was  just going to have these pages 91 00:07:16,480 --> 00:07:18,520 and I thought everybody would get it. 92 00:07:18,520 --> 00:07:19,520 COLE: These four pages. 93 00:07:19,520 --> 00:07:20,166 HOLZER: Yeah. 94 00:07:20,166 --> 00:07:20,729 COLE: I see. 95 00:07:20,729 --> 00:07:25,200 HOLZER: Yeah, but then I thought  maybe including what was in the… 96 00:07:25,200 --> 00:07:30,040 the first of the file and then have  a number of these dark to light 97 00:07:30,040 --> 00:07:33,920 that we have just a couple  of pages with real content. 98 00:07:33,920 --> 00:07:35,960 You know that it says, 99 00:07:35,960 --> 00:07:41,200 “Orwell’s book is one of the few politically  clear pictures of the complex situation 100 00:07:41,200 --> 00:07:42,720 during the first year of the war.” 101 00:07:42,720 --> 00:07:44,758 You know so there’s some reference to war. 102 00:07:47,991 --> 00:07:51,348 HOLZER: That’s more than  I’ve said in twelve years. 103 00:07:51,348 --> 00:07:52,900 COLE: Yeah. (LAUGHS) 104 00:07:54,506 --> 00:07:57,840 HOLZER: I’ve only worked with material  that already has been released. 105 00:07:57,840 --> 00:08:02,034 I have not done any Freedom of  Information Act request on my own 106 00:08:02,720 --> 00:08:06,201 because there’s so much to sift  through that’s already out. 107 00:08:11,138 --> 00:08:14,280 HOLZER: I’m dedicated to having  plans but then when I get here, 108 00:08:14,280 --> 00:08:22,169 about 50% of what I’ve schemed about  pertains and the rest is news to me as I go. 109 00:08:23,960 --> 00:08:29,160 We often come thinking that a work  will be a two-pager or a ten-pager. 110 00:08:29,160 --> 00:08:35,000 That, that tends to persist. What  will change often will be colors. 111 00:08:36,901 --> 00:08:38,720 Now these are some of the  more heavily redacted ones 112 00:08:38,720 --> 00:08:42,913 that’ll let us go from almost complete  black down to just a single line. 113 00:08:44,560 --> 00:08:48,720 This was lifted from an...an  early Renaissance painting. 114 00:08:48,720 --> 00:08:51,360 This is a little bit of the  sky and you can see the... 115 00:08:51,360 --> 00:08:53,440 the merge from dark to light. 116 00:08:53,440 --> 00:08:57,440 Uhhm, and some of these paintings I  think will have the dark part on top 117 00:08:57,440 --> 00:09:00,480 because it will be a little more  ominous, a little more oppressive. 118 00:09:00,480 --> 00:09:04,440 And other times we will have the light uh, so. 119 00:09:05,080 --> 00:09:07,094 Yeah, that’s a...a bold one. 120 00:09:08,144 --> 00:09:11,480 This is a letter that’s a  father appealing to the military 121 00:09:11,480 --> 00:09:15,080 so that the son isn’t charged criminally. 122 00:09:15,080 --> 00:09:18,980 So blue seems right. It’s dignified. 123 00:09:20,318 --> 00:09:21,721 Where’s the second page of that Mark? 124 00:09:37,040 --> 00:09:39,080 Let’s get on this part of it. 125 00:09:40,336 --> 00:09:42,120 MARK: You want me to flip it? See how it looks? 126 00:09:54,700 --> 00:09:57,160 HOLZER: Yeah, that looks like dark sky. Yeah. 127 00:09:58,920 --> 00:10:01,574 “I beg of you as a father for my son’s life.” 128 00:10:05,280 --> 00:10:08,240 Most of the paintings are  only three times page size 129 00:10:08,240 --> 00:10:12,240 because I wanted them to  refer to the actual documents. 130 00:10:12,240 --> 00:10:19,070 Other ones I made very, very tall so that  they would be physically overwhelming. 131 00:10:20,120 --> 00:10:22,320 In addition to having all the paintings, 132 00:10:22,320 --> 00:10:24,520 all the still works if you will, 133 00:10:24,520 --> 00:10:33,440 I wanted to have one moving message piece so  that I could include more text than I could in… 134 00:10:33,440 --> 00:10:34,640 in the paintings. 135 00:10:34,640 --> 00:10:39,280 So we had any number of the  declassified documents transcribed 136 00:10:39,280 --> 00:10:44,288 and we showed them on LED’s  so that this would stream by 137 00:10:44,720 --> 00:10:48,361 like more bad news than one can bear. 138 00:10:54,240 --> 00:10:57,146 I’ve always admired Goya’s black paintings. 139 00:10:59,040 --> 00:11:02,520 I’ve been walking up to the  black paintings for so many years 140 00:11:02,520 --> 00:11:05,840 and couldn’t figure out what that meant to me. 141 00:11:05,840 --> 00:11:10,880 And when this material started coming out  about the conflict in Afghanistan and Iraq 142 00:11:10,880 --> 00:11:15,120 and the camps in the Middle  East and in Guantanamo, 143 00:11:15,223 --> 00:11:16,909 Goya was at hand. 144 00:11:18,783 --> 00:11:24,649 I do tend to make work that focuses on  cruelty and in hopes that people will recoil. 145 00:11:30,720 --> 00:11:32,240 My grandmother was a horse genius, 146 00:11:32,240 --> 00:11:36,528 so I always turn to the ponies to calm myself. 147 00:11:44,013 --> 00:11:47,120 HOLZER: Usually nothing too awful  happens in the barn at night. 148 00:11:47,120 --> 00:11:49,520 And if it does we often can fix it. 149 00:11:49,520 --> 00:11:51,296 What could be more soothing? 150 00:11:54,323 --> 00:11:57,487 And then commentary. (LAUGHS) 151 00:11:57,837 --> 00:11:59,661 I agree, it was about worth that. 152 00:12:04,520 --> 00:12:07,320 I want to be able to continue to work, 153 00:12:07,320 --> 00:12:11,755 to pull from good and ghastly text, 154 00:12:12,702 --> 00:12:19,028 to offer these to people and to present  them in ways that are lovely and exacting.