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[Windsor Terrace, Brooklyn]
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[New York Close Up]
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[Daniel Gordon, Artist]
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[SOUND OF CELL PHONE VIBRATING]
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--[GORDON] Hello?
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["Daniel Gordon Looks Back"]
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--Yeah, this is he.
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A few weeks ago,
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I was here working
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and I got a call from somebody
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who had bought a work that I made in 2004
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and the picture was damaged
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and they were wondering if they could have
it reprinted.
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So I started looking for the negative
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and it was really great to
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step back twelve years ago
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and see what I was making then.
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It's shockingly kind of similar
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to what I'm doing now.
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I really like that plant--
it’s so weird--
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and I think that's the clue
into the fact that it's
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a constructed tableau.
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Back then I was trying to
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figure out what my voice was
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and I was also just kind of learning how to
make stuff physically.
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I really was trying to mimic reality
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which is something that I have become
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less and less interested in.
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Not that there's not
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a version of reality in my pictures now,
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but instead of trying to hide all of that work
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I think it became more interesting to show
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the crumpled paper
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and the handmade stuff
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to show that Photoshop is, like,
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really present in the process.
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Changing a watermelon to be blue
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or a peach to be green...
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Pixelating things.
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Adding noise to stuff.
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[Sound of keys jingling off-screen]
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[Danny moved to a new studio]
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[next to his wife Ruby.]
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[RUBY SKY STILER] I thought we needed more space
away from each other,
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but maybe what we really needed
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was some more time together.
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[BOTH LAUGH]
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[GORDON] Ruby probably likes my past work
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more than I do,
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and I like Ruby’s past work
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more than she does.
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It's pretty rare that we would look back
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and we're like,
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"That was so great, what I was doing."
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No.
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[STILER] As I get further from the thing,
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I dislike it more and more.
[Ruby Sky Stiler, Artist]
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[GORDON] But then sometimes, you go,
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"It's so long ago..."
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that you really are so detached...
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[STILER] I've heard you say that before
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and I've never felt that.
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[GORDON] You haven’t?
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[STILER] No.
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[GORDON] Every now and then, you...
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...like what about, um...
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[STILER] Oh God, don't even say a thing.
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[GORDON] What about the vase?
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That was so cool!
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[STILER] Okay, that's the one thing...
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[GORDON] See.
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[STILER] ...that I think is okay.
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[GORDON] Okay, what about, um...
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[STILER] Okay, stop!
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[GORDON] In a lot of ways,
the more work you make,
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the more there is to make.
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You make a lot of work
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and then you hang on to a few,
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and I find myself looking back
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at a few pictures
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and wanting to expand on those.
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For example, I found that picture when I was moving.
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It was made around the same time
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as some of these other pictures.
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And I was re-inspired by it
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and wanted to see what it would be like
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if I took that as a starting point.
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I was interested in what happened
if I took out
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the identifiable parts of a face.
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Kind of, like, how far I could push
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the idea of a portrait.
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Kind of, how far I could go
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away from what an eye is--
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or what a nose is,
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or what a mouth is--
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and still hopefully have it read as
a portrait in someway.
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Like, for example, just talking about these pictures.
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They're so new that I don’t know
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the answers to them.
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Like, I think it takes a long time to,
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kind of, understand what it is you're doing.
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[STILER] I've been in a stage
for a couple of months
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where, like, I haven’t been able to figure out
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where I want to go.
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And it's, like,
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you have to be delusional to, like,
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keep coming back everyday
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to make more failures.
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I just feel like I'm never satisfied
with my work.
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And I think that's good--
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like, I'm always antsy.
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I just want to keep growing
and making things
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that are beyond my expectations
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and making things that are ambitious
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and terrify me.
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[GORDON] I think I'm, like,
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right in between, generationally.
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I lived half my life before the internet
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and half my life after.
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So, I think that there's
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a really interesting conflict between
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the analog versus the digital.
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And I love both.
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[Camera shutter clicks]
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You know, for example,
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like, this really large still life.
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I made a quick selection of watermelon,
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the green jug,
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the blue plum,
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and the orange peach.
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And then created a new canvas,
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and, kind of, stamped those...
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that selection into the new canvas.
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I was curious--and still am curious--
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if there was a way to make
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non-representational images
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but also, still, in some way,
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are related to my photographs--
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that they're, kind of,
an in-between thing.
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I'm just kind of interested to see
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where the line between a photograph,
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and a painting, and a sculpture lies.
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I think the real question is
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how can you continue to work
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and continue to be truly invested
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and truly interested in what you're doing.
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And, for me, the only way to do that
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is to try new things--
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to invent new ways of making pictures.
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So that, eventually,
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maybe those questions will have answers.
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But, like, right now,
I'm just, kind of,
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asking the questions, I think.