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[Greenpoint, Brooklyn]
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[DOOR SLAMS]
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[LIGHT SWITCH FLICKS ON]
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[SOUND OF COMPUTER STARTING UP]
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[New York Close Up]
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["Lucas Blalock's Digital Toolkit"]
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This is "The Smoker".
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[SOUND OF CAMERA SHUTTER CLICKING]
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That picture started off by me wanting to
make a picture of a smoker.
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It sort of relates to this Magritte painting
from the late Forties.
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I was going to have an exhibition in Brussels
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and Magritte is from Brussels.
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It seemed like a suitable environment for
this, sort of, game.
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[SOUND OF CAMERA SHUTTER CLICKING]
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[SOUND OF CAMERA SHUTTER CLICKING]
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[Lucas Blalock, Artist]
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I started using Photoshop when I was still
in undergrad.
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It was just, like, a procedural tool.
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Like, it was a replacement for the dark room.
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It felt like special effects for a long time.
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It felt just like something after the fact—
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that it was, sort of, making up ground for
a picture.
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It took me a long time to get to a place
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where I understood how I might be able to
use it.
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Around the time I read Bertolt Brecht's book
on theater—
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he was talking about bringing the labor
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that happened offstage—in a theater production—onto
the stage.
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I started to think about the kinds of labor
I was hiding.
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There are all these ways to, sort of, hide
your labor in Photoshop.
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And I'd been really interested in, sort of,
undermining those things.
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There are a lot of things the computer will
do for you
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that don't need you,
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and those have never been tools that I've
been particularly attracted to.
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Like, I'm attracted to the ones that are sort
of the dumbest tools in Photoshop.
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And I tend to use them in the most blunt way.
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[1. Eraser Tool]
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One of the rules of photography seems to be
that
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the photograph needs to be homogeneous--
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it needs to be one thing.
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Usually that's one view.
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I was really interested in how I add levels
of labor to photographs
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without losing that sense of photographicness.
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And the cutting through was part of that.
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[2. Masking]
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In commercial practice, masking is a way to
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select the sky in a photograph and make it
a darker blue,
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or to select someone's eyes in a photograph
and sort of brighten them up.
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And for me, masking has sort of opened up
possibilities of drawing out relationships.
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Like, when I saw this bag, it looked like
a human torso to me,
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and when I took its picture,
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that's sort of what was on my mind.
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When I got the negative back, I started to
look for opportunities
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to sort of enhance that relationship.
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One of the tools that I've used a lot is the
clone stamp--
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[3. Clone Stamp]
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you would use to take out imperfections,
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or you would use to remove a lamp post from
a street.
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I think something with the clone stamp particularly
that I'm really excited about:
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it's an activity that can be either additive
or subtractive.
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So you could cover something up--
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say, take an object out of the picture--
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but if you did it poorly,
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it would leave this, kind of, interference
pattern in the background.
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There's been an anxiety about, sort of, you
know,
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[4. Brush Tool]
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"Why would you make another picture now?"
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"What's the point?"
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"There are pictures of everything already."
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I really had started to think about photography
as an activity of drawing--
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as a way to try to understand the world through
making a picture of it.
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And this seems to be a continuation of the
historic activity of drawing--
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like, drawing with a pencil.
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When I started, what I was doing
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was sort of making a burlesque of commercial
practice.
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Because, really, these were the only people
who were using
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digital effects in their pictures.
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And so, I use all of the tools that I use
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in a really similar way.
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[SOUND OF CAMERA SHUTTER CLICKING]
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They're all, really, this shovel, you know?
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They're this extension of the finger.
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[SOUND OF CAMERA SHUTTER CLICKING]
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Being sort of stuck into space,
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it's an entry into a space that I couldn't
enter any other way
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but through Photoshop.
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Humor, for me, has been an important thing
in my work
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because it's a way to, sort of, bring people into
the room.
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It's literally disarming.
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Like, Buster Keaton,
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or like, early cinema--
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it's people who were incredibly effective
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at drawing our understanding of the cinema.
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Buster Keaton's gags give us a way to enter
movies.
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Humor for me is about relationships.
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It's about an invitation to relate to the
objects in the pictures,
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and I think that more and more, as time has
gone on,
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it's been also about relating to this sort
of
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ambiguousness of photographing digital space
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and the way that it's now being construed.
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I believe in art because art makes new spaces.
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Aesthetics is a way of, sort of, proto thinking--
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of thinking before you can think these new
thoughts.
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Even in the goofiest, most ridiculous way,
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aesthetics is a way of, sort of, unpacking
possibility.