-
I think there is this sort
of conflicting obsessions.
-
One is kind of twinship and
the other is opposition.
-
It's about people that look
the same but aren't the same.
-
It's about boys that look like girls
-
or girls that look like boys.
-
Or boys that look like soldiers in arms.
-
I'm trying to create tribes of people.
-
And I think that's why I was
so drawn to the wrestling.
-
You get there and there's this tribe,
-
and they do sort of look a bit similar.
-
They all have the same kind of bodies.
-
Their ears turn the same way
if they wrestle too long.
-
And when you have this kind
of twinship in opposition,
-
it becomes, I mean, it's a
kind of a metaphor for this,
-
you know, for the Jew and the German.
-
German Jews thinking that
they were the same as Germans
-
and being so different.
-
(upbeat music)
-
I decided to go back to high school
and photograph high school wrestling.
-
I had never really seen my wrestling team
-
because no one ever had interest in wrestling.
-
And I was just really taken by the guys.
-
I loved the way the guys looked,
-
I loved that they were doing something
that in a way made them small outcasts.
-
They were doing not a popular sport,
not a sport that people watched.
-
A sport that, that was really difficult.
-
Particularly in practice it’s about partnerships.
-
And I just thought it was a really beautiful
relationship that I had never seen before.
-
All at the same time I had heard about a guy,
-
a friend of mine I knew, who used
to be a really big college wrestler.
-
He was sort of you know on the fringe art world
-
and we should get together sometime.
-
He’s been coaching me and kind of explaining
-
from the position of a wrestler what’s going on.
-
JON: Whenever we would go somewhere we would just
-
talk the whole time about wrestling.
-
And it was fun for me to try to,
you know, answer her questions
-
because she would ask questions about
things that were innate or something
-
I knew automatically from doing it for so long
-
but I would have to explain it and come,
-
you know, try to explain it to her…
-
she understands, you know, she catches on quickly.
-
For me, ya know, and I can
only approach it as a woman,
-
but for me, from the outside
-
masculinity has sort of been depicted
in very black and white terms.
-
There’s just, there never seems to be a,
-
a wide range of emotional definitions of men.
-
–Are you guys twins?
-
–No.
-
I love when I’m shooting wrestling,
-
particularly in practice to see
two guys throwing some moves
-
and then being careful that
they didn’t hurt each other.
-
You know pushing as hard as
they can but then pulling back,
-
making sure that they’re okay.
-
Talking about how to do it better,
-
All that kind of stuff I think is is to me a rich,
-
a rich part of, of masculinity.
-
See, this is the classic wrestling guy.
-
I just love this guy—St.
Eds—He won his match so fast.
-
And then the newer pictures are like this
-
I’m looking for introspection.
-
I’m looking for the moment
before the guy goes out there.
-
The moment when he comes off
-
either exhilarated because he won or
devastated because he lost.
-
I like devastation.
-
I like exhaustion.
-
I, I really like seeing someone
that I know can’t barely get up
-
The thing about a wrestling practice is the
-
coach will really get every
last bit of energy out of you.
-
And there’s a peacefulness in
that moment that I really love,
-
to see someone who’s just used their entire body.
-
As much as you explain to someone that you want to
-
show all sides of it,
-
no one who lost wants a flash on their face.
-
–Oh, sorry..
-
But having a woman approach them is different.
-
I think most of the people in the
wrestling world are, are guys.
-
–You wonna draw a picture from these pictures?
-
–Ya, okay, I'll do it if
you'll make a trade with me.
-
Teenagers’ sexuality belongs to themselves.
-
If I catch a glimpse of their sexiness,
-
it’s a sexiness they’re playing
with and they’re practicing,
-
but it’s not something I’m asking for.
-
I’m aware that it’s there,
-
I’m aware that other people might see it,
-
but I’m interested in the life
I would have had if I was a boy
-
and this is one facet of it.
-
Gender, religion, nationality, they’re all sort of
things that are in flux in my work.
-
Um, and they all build on each other,
-
this idea of you’re not
sure what you’re looking at.
-
You’re not sure what you are,
-
you’re not sure what someone else is.
-
In the Helga pictures,
-
I set out to create a total
portrait of a young man
-
using Andrew Wyeth’s Helga
paintings as a template.
-
To explore how one defines someone in images.
-
And also using a description of
femininity to describe a man.
-
You start to wonder with
the Andrew Wyeth portraits
-
is it a feminine pose or is it an artists pose,
-
is it Wyeth’s pose,
-
is it Helga’s pose?
-
Helga reminds me so much of Jens,
-
this boy Jens, from Prague.
-
This was Jens when he was eighteen and a half.
-
And he was really quite similar in the physique.
-
And then he really changed here
when he turned nineteen and a half.
-
He got slimmer.
-
You see the resistance of the
boy Jens in playing Helga.
-
He’s playing this character,
-
and the only way he can pose in certain poses is
-
to know that everyone else knows he’s playing her,
-
that it’s not really him.
-
But you see moments where he forgets.
-
And they’re the poses he would call neutral poses.
-
And the feminine poses are the poses
that he feels women perform for men.
-
It wouldn’t have been a successful project
-
had there not been an intense
collaboration between Jens and I,
-
like both understanding we’re both doing this job,
-
and it was somewhat difficult and confusing,
-
and we had mixed feelings about it,
-
but it became a kind of ritual,
like making these pictures,
-
and often we’d make the same
picture over and over again.
-
There’s a notion of—I think—
-
that I’ve always had in my work of
trying to get very close to something.
-
You know trying to create as
little distance as possible between
-
the viewer and the subject
-
and I think that the level of intimacy that
Wyeth pursued was really familar to me.
-
Fourteen years ago I went to Stuttgart
with a German friend from New York,
-
and ended up in this small town
and met this amazing family.
-
I kind of just fell in love with the whole family
-
in kind of traditional, kind
of country family setting.
-
And I guess about four
summers into the relationship
-
I started photographing the
younger members of the family.
-
It really became part of, I
think, the summer experience,
-
that you know summer came with picture taking.
-
And it was this kind of big thing that
happened, sometimes every day for a week.
-
I started shooting Herbert
when he was nine years old.
-
And he doesn’t even remember
the first time he was shot,
-
he has to look at pictures to,
to say, oh yeah that was me.
-
HERBERT: We would go to the forest and kind of play soldiers with the uniforms at that time.
-
And play hide and seek.
-
Schorr: Here’s Karin dressed up as a guy.
-
Everything was so fake there.
-
There was a girl playing a guy,
-
there’s all these German boys playing grown men
-
and there’s Germans playing American soldiers.
-
And all this clothing was
yours at that point right?
-
Herbert: Right.
Schorr: Because that is how I started doing army
-
pictures because you had all this stuff.
-
Herbert: Because of my army nerdiness.
-
Schorr: Yes, your army obsession.
-
HERBERT: I might have possessed
like seven or eight U.S. uniforms
-
when I met Collier first.
-
We got the U.S. military uniforms
pretty cheap at flea markets
-
because troops were leaving town at
that time, or they were leaving Germany.
-
Schorr: But you always had this posse of guys
-
that for what was I paying back in
the old days like 10 marks an hour.
-
Schorr: you can’t go to a lake
with a bunch of teenage boys
-
and not have a plan.
-
You’ve got to have a plan.
-
When we’re kind of marching around the lake,
-
I may say, okay Herbert, you
know hold Andreas’s shoulder.
-
And they’ll just kind of pose
like that, and that’s a picture.
-
And it’s not a picture I planned,
but it’s a picture I saw.
-
When you’re a Jew and you walk around in Germany,
-
it has such a hold on you.
-
And I wanted see it from all sides.
-
I always saw it from the side of you
know the Jew who felt victimized,
-
or the Jew who felt oppressed.
-
And I was very comfortable
in that role for many years.
-
But being in Germany for a longer amount of time,
-
my experience changed, my
relationship changed to the country;
-
my curiosity about what it was like from
the other side kind of opened me up.
-
So much of my work, especially portraits of,
-
of large, blond, strong guys is really
about confronting a sort of Aryan myth
-
that terrified me as a little girl,
-
because I would read books
like DIARY OF ANNE FRANK
-
and things like that and that
was what you were scared of.
-
That was the Jewish girl’s boogeyman,
-
you know the big blond guy
kind of coming up the stairs.
-
I mean I think all the boys really enjoyed
playing heroes or playing good guys.
-
It was, it was strange to
bring in the Nazi uniforms
-
because they were suddenly
confronted with something
-
that they didn’t feel very positive
about or they were afraid that…
-
to feel positive about.
-
And so I think those pictures
have an interesting quality
-
that separates them from the other ones
-
because there’s a real uncertainty in
their expressions, in their posture.
-
HERBERT: The German youth has some…
-
kind of um a torn apart relationship
with this kind of stuff.
-
You won’t see a swastika anyplace
because it’s forbidden by law,
-
it’s not legal.
-
And so besides of running the risk that
-
you can be punished for wearing a
Wehrmacht and S.S. uniforms in public,
-
you are simply not used to it
because you would see this stuff,
-
not even in museums.
-
Probably you would see it in a,
-
in a feature film from that time,
-
in an American feature
film, not even a German one.
-
So many things are buried
in the landscape in Germany.
-
So many uniforms and medals,
and you hear stories of people
-
coming upon buttons and helmets in, in the fields.
-
And I think that I really
wanted to flush some of that up,
-
to dig some of that up,
-
and to almost that some of these soldiers
seemed to have come up from the ground.
-
So that if you were walking in
the field and you saw a helmet,
-
it was as though the soldier
rose up with that helmet.
-
And he didn’t rise up as the ultimate villain
-
and he didn’t rise up as the ultimate victim,
-
he rose up as, as just a guy you
know, who fought, just a guy who died.
-
Um, just a guy who killed someone.
-
Schorr: I like the relationship
between this current Joa,
-
this current solider with these Nazis
-
because it really looks like to me that
-
he represents the whole German
Army that sits in the woods
-
and maybe daydreams.
-
If the forest is the pride of Germany,
-
then you know let’s talk
about what actually happened
-
in the forest rather than
just showing the forest.
-
I’m not making something that’s about the façade,
-
I’m making something that’s
about removing the myth,
-
and then being left with
something that is more human.
-
There’s not a single intention that
I want people to walk away with
-
when they look at the body of work.
-
I wanted to make work that spoke to
as many people’s desires as possible,
-
be it a sort of maternal desire,
-
or a fraternal desire…
-
the desire to revisit your youth,
-
the desire for romance.
-
For me there is no progress
unless you put things forward,
-
unless you sort of unveil, you know, desire,
-
unless you unveil uh, repression.