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[Marcel Dzama: Organizing Chaos]
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So these costumes are quite old.
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[LAUGHS]
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This one was just a halloween costume.
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[LAUGHS]
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I guess I have a hoarder tendency.
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That was the one thing I didn’t adapt to
in being a New Yorker,
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to get rid of things as quickly
as your small apartment allows.
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I'm originally from Winnipeg, Canada.
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The winters are quite cold,
and last for almost half the year.
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It’s hard to get together to socialize
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because there's this barrier of weather
that keeps you isolated.
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I used to color a lot as a kid.
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I would draw a lot of Universal monsters.
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Any of those characters
like The Wolfman and Dracula.
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And then created my own world
to have something to do.
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The thing with living in Winnipeg is,
especially in the winter,
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the horizon and the land just kind of...
they just dissolved into each other.
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So you would see this,
almost like a blank page.
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And if someone would walk into it,
it would look like a blank piece of paper
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with a figure.
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And so I think that really
subconsciously influenced my style.
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When I was in art school,
I was still living in my parents' place.
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I did have quite a bit of larger works
on board from my grandfather's farm.
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He took apart a barn
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and I used a lot of the panels from that
and painted on it with house paint.
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Then there was a house fire.
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I basically lost all of my work from the past
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and most of my possessions.
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So, I started drawing on hotel stationery
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and that ended up being my thesis.
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["The Royal Art Lodge" collaborative work]
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Those were the works that
I would start to get known for,
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this isolated background
with just a few figures.
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After the house fire there was
this real feeling of loss.
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But, on the other hand,
there was also this possibility--
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and, in some ways, also made it easier
to move to New York.
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I used to have more of a red and brown palette.
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I'm definitely going through a blue period.
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I did some political work in the Bush years,
during the Iraq war.
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In Trump years, I kind of felt like,
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to go to sleep, I needed this exorcism of
the news media that I had taken in that day.
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So I needed to get it out.
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--I included the Dada image because
they had the disgust of World War I.
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--So I thought it was good timing for the
disgust of what’s going on right now [LAUGHS]
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--in our political age.
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--I think it's gotten me in a
bit of a downward spiral.
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After the Sandy Hook shooting,
I stopped drawing guns.
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And then once Trump got in, I felt like it,
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as some sort of resistance symbol,
I brought it back.
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The revolution is going to be female.
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--Switch it up.
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When I moved to New York,
I found the work getting much more claustrophobic.
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I wanted to put some sort of order to it.
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I found these old dance magazines and
realized I should put them in dance positions.
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That's how I put some
organization to the chaos
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of this claustrophobia.
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I even turned a lot of the creatures
into costumes for humans.
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I thought of it more as a stage
from that point.
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More of a dance element,
kind of almost like a Broadway show.
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This has been a few artists that I like to
reference in my work quite a bit.
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Duchamp, Goya, William Blake, Picabia--
definitely my heroes.
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[LAUGHS]
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Picabia, had done this ballet,
where there was this polka-dotted character.
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That really inspired me to move into
more of a polka-dotted direction.
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I did this just after the school shooting
in Florida.
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Emma Gonzalez did this really powerful speech
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and Fox News was trying to bring her down
with some sort of criticism.
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So, I drew this group of
conspiracy theory people
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and this circus surrounding this young lady.
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I start quite late in the studio.
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The more interesting ideas
come out of my work
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in that witching hour.
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I feel that's where that world is set--
that I've created.
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There's more of a flow,
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because I have one foot in subconscious
and one in reality.
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I try not to censor myself.
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So I just let whatever at the top of my head
come out.
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Butterflies have come into the work.
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Moths and different insects.
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I always keep it open to
whatever the mood is.
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There's this possibility of
anything can happen.