-
--[WESTON PEW] Car seat stroller!
-
--[MARELA ZACARIAS] I don't know how it opens,
though.
-
--I might look up the instructions, but you
don't have to...
-
So basically, what we're going to do
-
is we're putting together 1 through 5,
-
which is the part of the piece that goes on
the ceiling.
-
I found out that I got this commission
-
pretty much at the same time--the same week--
-
that I found out that I was pregnant.
-
[Marela Zacarias, artist]
-
I mean, we've been joking about how I have
two babies coming
-
because they're due at the same time.
-
--There you go!
-
--[PEW] Cool! His first car!
-
--I like it.
-
[ZACARIAS] It looks good.
-
--[PEW] A little short for me...
-
[Weston Pew, Husband]
-
--[ZACARIAS] I think you can adjust it.
-
--Can you adjust it?
-
[Bed Stuy, Brooklyn]
-
[Marela Zacarias's Great Expectations]
-
I want to finish the piece before I have the
baby,
-
so we've been fighting against time.
-
And I feel like both projects have been developing
in the same way.
-
At the moment when we have the first sonogram,
-
we get first rendering done of the piece,
-
and it's all white.
-
You don't know what it's going to look like.
-
And then as it starts coming together,
-
the baby is growing.
-
And in the same way, our piece is growing.
-
[Marela, Age 1]
-
[Marela, Age 3]
-
[Marela, Age 6]
-
I feel like as we move forward even in life,
-
it's always important to recognize where you
come from,
-
and it's not until we integrate where we come
from
-
that you are complete.
-
When I moved to New York, I was a muralist.
-
I feel like, after 10 years of painting murals--
-
for other people, with other people--
-
my own voice as an artist
-
was wanting to claim a little more space to
just experiment,
-
and that's when I decided to go to grad school.
-
Grad school put me upside down.
-
It really pushed me to find out what I really
wanted to say
-
and how I wanted to say it.
-
And I'm glad because I feel like
-
now I can say a lot more things through my
own language.
-
[The William Vale Hotel, Williamsburg]
-
But I also think that my work is still talking
about a narrative--
-
there's a story behind it,
-
there's a research.
-
So if I was going to make a piece
-
for this new hotel being built in Williamsburg,
-
for this place in Brooklyn that is developing
so fast,
-
I think that I had to go back to the past--
-
to the origins.
-
As I'm doing research,
-
then things start really coming to the front.
-
They feel right.
-
And that's what happened
-
when I was going through the archives from
the Brooklyn Historical Society
-
and I started looking at maps of Brooklyn.
-
I think the shape, for me, emerged as
"This is it."
-
I feel like we are at a time where things
-
are moving forward really quickly in Brooklyn
-
and changing rapidly.
-
Part of that energy is kind of unstoppable.
-
I mean, we're all being affected by it,
-
for good and for bad.
-
So I really wanted to take a moment to look
at the past,
-
and I kind of made the piece about that--
-
about that energy that started it all.
-
This is actually the ceiling.
-
It's Williamsburg and Greenpoint and Bushwick.
-
This is a sketch,
-
and this is only half of the piece.
-
There's a second floor that goes down.
-
When I was working on figurative murals,
-
they were telling a story visually.
-
You could see it and immediately recognize
what it was trying to say.
-
But that was the end of the interaction.
-
I feel like abstraction really allows for
the story to be filtered
-
and to come out in a different way
-
in which people can either see it or not see
it at all.
-
At least it creates a question like, "What
is this about?"
-
instead of just being like, "Oh, this is about
this."
-
[PEW] Once the colors get on it,
-
it starts to show itself--
-
reveal itself.
-
[ZACARIAS] In some ways, it's similar to the birth.
-
Like, you're working really hard for a long time
-
on this thing that you don't know what it's
going to look like
-
or what kind of personality it's going to have.
-
[PEW] The piece is, like, in the crowning
stage of labor.
-
[BOTH LAUGH]
-
Which is when the baby's head begins to show itself.
-
A few more hard pushes and...
-
[BOTH LAUGH]
-
...and we're there!
-
At 12:34 a.m. on January 3rd,
-
Mateo Zacarias Pew was born.
-
[ZACARIAS] You know, they have this saying
in Spanish, it says,
-
[IN SPANISH] "If you want to make God laugh"
-
"just tell him your plans."
-
I had this idea that I would install the project
and then have the baby,
-
but the building was delayed.
-
And me being pregnant also added some delay
to everything.
-
Not everything comes out the way that you
say it will,
-
but that's okay.
-
I mean, I think I'm lucky to have an amazing husband
-
who supports my artwork 100%
-
and who will help me raise Mateo
-
and who will help me be able to get things done
-
at the studio.
-
Because it seems like it's not going to get slower.
-
I'm definitely not planning on stopping my work.
-
And hopefully I get to spend all of my time
with my baby
-
and see him grow
-
and be there for him.