-
(machinery beeping)
-
(beads rustling)
-
- For me, photography is a very intimate
-
and one-on-one encounter.
-
(gentle instrumental music)
-
Certain materials are understood
-
very differently through the camera.
-
I think it's amazing when something can be
-
really transfigured through the lens.
-
I make photographs and videos and
-
also have installation elements,
-
what I would call
architectural interventions.
-
(instrumental music continues)
-
Photographs are such
intense condensations.
-
They're almost like a dreamwork.
-
(people cheering)
-
That YouTube, internet
space, it gives me ideas
-
to make me feel connected to other people
-
who are also trying to make things.
-
(gentle electronic music)
-
I love watching craft
videos, fruit carvings,
-
cooking tutorials, makeup
tutorials, braiding hair.
-
These crafts and acts of making
-
have a real temporality to them,
-
almost like an expiration date.
-
Photography deals so
well with the impermanent
-
because you can just make an image
-
of a very impermanent situation.
-
(dramatic music)
-
As a photographer, I feel
like it's my imperative
-
that I have to take in all
of the trash, you know,
-
of the world and I think I
work from this psychic garbage.
-
I work with so many discarded materials,
-
things that have very little
social value ascribed to them.
-
I'll be cleaning my house
and sweep up a pile of dust
-
and I'll take that dust
and I'll just bring it
-
to the studio in a bag.
-
Or maybe I take something
that has social value
-
and I turn it back into materiality.
-
A successful image happens right before
-
everything falls apart and that could be
-
because I'm lighting something on fire
-
and I only have one split second.
-
(funky music)
-
I'm touching things and arranging things,
-
but it all has to happen within
one instantaneous moment.
-
(funky music continues)
-
(upbeat whimsical music)
-
Sounds that you can't hear
and air that you can't feel
-
and all the factors that
you can't experience
-
shape what the photograph
ends up becoming.
-
(beads rustling)
-
By the time I'm finished with an image,
-
I don't even remember where I started.
-
(beads clinking)
-
It's actually a process that's an
-
accumulation of failures in my studio.
-
It's very improvisational.
-
I almost think of it as a
performance I am doing alone.
-
(orchestral music soaring)
-
(water tinkling)
-
I try to work against
that impulse to identify
-
and get more towards a place of feeling.
-
I think knowing can create a distance.
-
Growing up and seeing the way that my mom
-
interacted with physical
things in America,
-
where so oftentimes in the wrong way,
-
in the way that she would pack my launch,
-
a sauce in saran wrap,
chips in saran wrap.
-
I came home to visit my mom
and she was out in the garden
-
and she was just stabbing
fake flowers into the ground,
-
amongst real flowers.
-
It was just like why would you do that?
-
Why do you want fake flowers?
-
To her, there's no difference.
-
There are the fake flowers
and the real flowers
-
filling up the yard and
making it look vibrant.
-
Seeing her do that, combine
the natural and the artificial
-
for the sake of this cohesive image,
-
I felt so much relation
to that in my work.
-
There's something about hidden labor
-
that actually imbues a
psychic charge to an object.
-
I'm interested in these
divides in culture.
-
What's trashy and what's seen
as intellectual and clean?
-
I really relate to that space of copying,
-
wanting to be this other thing
and stepping into that role.
-
And I love karaoke.
-
When you're singing
karaoke with your friends,
-
the lyrics all of the sudden take on
-
this totally different meaning.
-
It brings out the text
of the original material.
-
♪ And the vision that was planted in my brain ♪
-
♪ Still remains ♪
-
♪ Within the sound ♪
- "The Sound of Silence"
-
was written to provoke Western
liberal American sympathy.
-
The Vietnamese subject was always
-
very peripheral to that sympathy.
-
With "Tyrant Star," I was just looking
-
for the perfect war song
-
and I ended up picking this peace anthem.
-
I worked with this girl,
I found her on YouTube.
-
She was kind of like the
aspiring star of "Tyrant Star."
-
She can't speak English, I
taught her every syllable
-
of "The Sound of Silence."
-
A lot of the sounds in this song
-
are helicopters used
during the Vietnam War.
-
I could take these sounds that were
-
coming from a very violent place
-
and then shift them into a pop song.
-
I really like cover songs 'cause
it takes this given reality
-
that you know and understand
-
and you can completely twist the affect
-
on that given reality based
on who's singing it and how.
-
Just the act of having someone
Vietnamese sing this song
-
was powerful, even for
me to hear her sing it.
-
(somber music)
-
There's something about being an artist
-
that comes from an inability to just be.
-
The moment that you speak or communicate,
-
there's already mediation.
-
There's something that's about intimacy
-
that is actually more
important than knowing
-
and I wonder all the time what actually
-
makes you closer to something.
-
(Singing to The Sound of Silence)
♪ Hello darkness my old friend ♪
-
♪ I've come to talk to you again ♪
-
♪ Ten thousand people, maybe more ♪
-
♪ Because a vision softly creeping ♪
♪ People talking without speaking ♪
-
♪ People hearing without listening ♪
-
♪ People writing songs ♪
-
♪ No one dared ♪
-
♪ Disturb the sound of silence ♪