WEBVTT 00:00:07.684 --> 00:00:12.451 [Bruce Nauman: "Poke in the Eye/Nose/Ear"] 00:00:14.961 --> 00:00:16.582 What is it, "Poke in the Eye?" 00:00:17.845 --> 00:00:18.541 "Ear?" 00:00:21.184 --> 00:00:22.013 What is it? 00:00:22.716 --> 00:00:24.990 "Poke in the Eye, Ear, and Nose?" 00:00:25.722 --> 00:00:27.079 "Eye, Nose, and Ear?" 00:00:27.079 --> 00:00:27.983 "Eye, Ear, and Nose?" 00:00:27.983 --> 00:00:29.213 Whatever. [LAUGHS] 00:00:35.294 --> 00:00:38.514 My videos always involve 00:00:38.514 --> 00:00:43.345 some idea of a human being in a unusual situation-- 00:00:43.840 --> 00:00:44.883 and what happens. 00:01:16.297 --> 00:01:18.036 It's shot in a very slow motion 00:01:18.036 --> 00:01:19.776 with a high-speed camera. 00:01:20.081 --> 00:01:22.770 In this case it was projected as a large image. 00:01:23.620 --> 00:01:30.148 And so, you're watching this uncomfortable activity take place 00:01:30.148 --> 00:01:32.483 at the same time as you're watching 00:01:32.743 --> 00:01:34.603 the way the colors change; 00:01:34.843 --> 00:01:36.683 the way the creases in the skin changes; 00:01:36.683 --> 00:01:37.882 the way the shadows change 00:01:37.882 --> 00:01:40.545 and move across the screen very slowly, 00:01:40.545 --> 00:01:43.040 so that they do become very abstract. 00:01:46.652 --> 00:01:48.851 As things go in and out of focus, 00:01:48.851 --> 00:01:52.083 your attention moves around quite a bit. 00:01:54.345 --> 00:01:55.449 It's slowed down enough-- 00:01:55.449 --> 00:01:56.547 things happen slowly enough-- 00:01:56.547 --> 00:01:58.881 that it becomes almost like a moon landscape, 00:01:58.881 --> 00:02:03.214 and you start just watching the slow frame-by-frame changes. 00:02:06.930 --> 00:02:08.280 That's what I liked about it. 00:02:08.280 --> 00:02:11.620 Again, another way of taking an activity 00:02:11.620 --> 00:02:15.682 and changing it's meaning-- 00:02:17.251 --> 00:02:19.988 abstracting it by stretching out the time, 00:02:22.780 --> 00:02:24.190 and allowing you to see things 00:02:24.190 --> 00:02:26.759 that you couldn't see otherwise, 00:02:27.715 --> 00:02:30.222 making you watch the formal parts of it. 00:02:40.520 --> 00:02:43.820 A lot of people were thinking about 00:02:43.820 --> 00:02:45.913 how to structure time. 00:02:46.483 --> 00:02:49.190 John Cage was making different kinds of ways of making music, 00:02:49.190 --> 00:02:52.789 and Merce was structuring dance in different kinds of ways, 00:02:53.115 --> 00:02:55.344 and then Warhol was making films that 00:02:55.344 --> 00:02:57.651 went on for a long period of time. 00:02:57.882 --> 00:02:59.715 One of the things I liked about some of those people 00:02:59.715 --> 00:03:03.388 was that they thought of their works as just on-going, 00:03:03.388 --> 00:03:05.314 and so you can come and go, 00:03:05.314 --> 00:03:07.114 and the work was there. 00:03:07.347 --> 00:03:09.620 And so there wasn't a specific duration. 00:03:10.115 --> 00:03:12.220 So where this thing can just repeat and repeat and repeat, 00:03:12.220 --> 00:03:14.052 and you don't have to sit and watch the whole thing. 00:03:14.052 --> 00:03:15.946 You can watch for a while, leave, and go have lunch. 00:03:15.946 --> 00:03:17.146 Or, come back in a week, 00:03:17.146 --> 00:03:18.342 and it's just going on. 00:03:18.342 --> 00:03:20.283 And I really like that idea of 00:03:20.283 --> 00:03:22.115 the thing just being there. 00:03:22.314 --> 00:03:24.590 It became almost like an object that was there, 00:03:24.851 --> 00:03:27.589 that you can go back and visit whenever you wanted to. 00:03:30.590 --> 00:03:33.051 It's probably more painful for the viewer than it was for me. 00:03:33.619 --> 00:03:34.621 [LAUGHS] 00:03:35.051 --> 00:03:36.483 I didn't hurt myself. 00:03:36.716 --> 00:03:37.853 [LAUGHS]