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Amy Sherald: Singular Moments | Art21 "Extended Play"

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    (soulful tranquil music)
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    (intriguing tranquil ethereal music)
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    - The protocol of painting
    is very slow and meditative,
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    and I think that's what
    I appreciate about it.
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    It's a space that I'm very comfortable in.
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    (intriguing tranquil ethereal music)
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    I think it's become really good
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    for my mental health. (laughs)
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    There's a dynamism that
    happens with these images
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    where it becomes about
    that singular moment.
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    (intriguing tranquil ethereal music)
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    (objects clacking)
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    Oh, it's on the table in the break room.
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    I was introduced to these bikers
    when I moved to Baltimore.
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    Although most people
    consider them a nuisance,
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    I think there's something so fantastic
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    about their ability to teach themselves
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    these highly skilled ways
    of riding these dirt bikes.
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    They're riding at this
    12 o'clock position,
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    which is straight up and down,
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    but a lot of times their
    hands are off of the bike,
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    and there's a sense of freedom.
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    I wanted to try to capture
    this effect of, like, flying.
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    Although these are dirt bikes,
    and dirt bikes are loud,
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    these paintings are kind of quiet,
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    as if they've been lifted off the ground,
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    they're flying in the air,
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    and it's just like this moment of silence.
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    (intriguing tranquil ethereal music)
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    (street bustling)
    (wind whooshing)
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    I was born in 1973.
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    We were always outside riding our bikes.
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    When we all turned like, I
    don't know, like 11 or 12,
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    somebody's parents got
    them like a scooter,
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    and then everybody got a scooter.
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    So all of us had...
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    It was like a gang of,
    like, 12 or 13 kids,
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    and we'd be riding around on our scooters.
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    It was an all-American childhood.
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    (intriguing tranquil ethereal music)
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    I kind of feel like a giant in here now.
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    There's like the piggy bank (chuckles)
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    that I painted in art
    class in high school.
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    I used to push this window up
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    and put my boombox in the window,
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    and I remember memorizing
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    Prince: "Sign O' The Times," (chuckles)
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    and playing it over and over again
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    with my cassette tape player.
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    (intriguing tranquil ethereal music)
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    Artists have been painting
    children for a very long time,
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    (intriguing tranquil ethereal music)
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    so it feels like another way
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    of making a traditional painting.
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    The idea was having this
    slide in the sky, almost,
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    and it seems like he's
    just reached this pinnacle,
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    like, he's this pioneer
    standing on top of a mountain.
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    I wanted to join him in
    that moment of exploration.
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    (intriguing tranquil ethereal music)
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    When I was living in Baltimore,
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    I had the opportunity to work on a farm.
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    It's some of the hardest
    work I've ever done,
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    and I have a great respect
    for the ministry of that,
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    of, like, growing food.
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    My model, his name is Denzel,
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    is just a very special person
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    who's very passionate
    about teaching people
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    how to grow their own food
    and where it comes from.
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    I named the painting "A God Blessed Land"
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    in thinking about American soil,
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    and my ancestral connections
    to farming and plantations.
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    Alongside that, I also want it
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    to just be, like, a regular
    moment of a guy's life.
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    (intriguing tranquil ethereal music)
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    (metal screeching)
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    (metal clanking)
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    Because the work is
    evolving and I'm evolving,
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    I've had to change my process up some.
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    Painting this large is very different
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    from what I've always done my whole life.
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    It's something that I'm
    still getting used to.
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    Certain things have to
    be more exaggerated,
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    like, highlights have
    to be more exaggerated
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    to still come to life,
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    when you're, you know, 10
    or 15, 20 feet back from it.
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    For me, it's really about
    getting the face in first.
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    Especially after I get the eyes in,
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    that's when the image kind of comes alive.
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    (intriguing tranquil music)
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    Hi, Alice.
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    I wanna like hop over,
    (chuckles) get closer.
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    (intriguing tranquil ethereal music)
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    This one, when I look at it,
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    I don't see anything I wanna fix,
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    which sometimes I'm like,
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    "Oh, I wish I could do this
    to it, or do that to it,"
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    but I don't see anything that I wanna fix.
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    I love beauty.
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    I know beauty's a bad word,
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    but I like to make things
    that make people feel good,
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    and I think beautiful
    paintings are important.
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    (intriguing tranquil
    ethereal upbeat music)
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    I say figuration is like
    the soul food of art-making,
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    it's like what takes you back home,
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    and what you eat when you need comfort.
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    And we all need that at some point.
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    (intriguing tranquil ethereal music)
Title:
Amy Sherald: Singular Moments | Art21 "Extended Play"
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"Extended Play" series
Duration:
07:31

English (United States) subtitles

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