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Graciela Iturbide in "Investigation" - Season 7 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21

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    GRACIELA ITURBIDE:
    - I take photographs very fast.
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    I follow my intuition
    and what surprises me.
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    I never use artificial lights
    or flash.
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    I always use my camera,
    just like this.
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    Frida kahlo's house has been
    photographed many times.
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    It is beautiful to photograph,
    but I am always trying
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    To encounter something
    that has not been seen.
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    There's going to be an exhibit
    in Denmark
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    of Frida's entire life.
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    I'm going to show some photos
    that I took in color.
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    This is the robe
    which she wore in the hospital,
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    and there, she kept painting.
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    This is part blood, part paint.
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    The director of this museum
    gave me permission
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    to photograph Frida's bathroom.
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    I took the photos
    in black and white,
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    which is more my way
    of expressing myself.
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    Thousands and thousands
    of people come to this museum.
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    She's still a figure
    of sainthood.
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    I am not a Frida maniac.
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    Despite her suffering,
    she painted,
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    and this is what I admire.
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    My photography about pain
    is very Catholic,
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    very related
    to my Catholic education.
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    This is Frida's bathroom.
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    This is a self-portrait
    I took of myself in the tub
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    after my foot operation.
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    She has a picture called
    what the water gives me
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    that has her feet like this,
    but with water.
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    I have done
    various self-portraits.
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    This is a self-portrait of me
    in Trotsky's house.
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    I am very close friends with
    Trotsky's great-granddaughter.
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    When I go there,
    I get a little bit depressed,
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    because they left the house
    with all those bullet holes,
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    with a lot
    of political memories.
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    We were 13 kids.
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    I'm the oldest.
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    Very, very Catholic.
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    I was educated by nuns.
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    I think that I'm the only one
    in my family
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    That isn't Catholic anymore.
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    Now I'm an atheist.
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    Mm, let's say agnostic.
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    My father used to take
    pictures of us
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    in black and white
    when we were kids.
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    I used to steal the photographs.
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    And sometimes I got punished,
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    because I was always
    opening that drawer
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    and taking the photographs.
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    And I made my own albums
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    so from there on, I liked
    black-and-white photography.
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    I wanted to be a writer
    when I was a child,
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    but I got married very young.
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    I got married when I was 19.
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    I was 26 years old when
    I started to study cinema,
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    with kids already.
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    My entry into film school
    was fantastic,
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    because Manuel,
    Manuel Alvarez Bravo,
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    was teaching there.
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    Nobody went to his classes,
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    because everybody wants
    to become a film director.
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    But at the third session,
    he asked me,
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    "Do you want to be
    my assistant?"
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    "I would love to.
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    It's my pleasure."
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    And that is how I got to know
    this wonderful man.
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    I always felt
    Manuel Alvarez Bravo's poetry.
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    Sometimes he only placed his
    camera at a landscape he liked
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    and he waited
    for something to happen.
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    And he always said,
    "There is time.
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    There is time."
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    It was a real privilege
    to have found him,
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    because he not only taught me
    about photography;
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    he taught me about life.
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    Alvarez Bravo focused
    on tree trunks
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    to create abstractions.
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    When I remember that he shot it,
    I say, "No.
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    "The influence is too great.
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    I better not."
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    But since I saw that there was
    a beautiful light...
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    This is Juchitan.
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    I went to Juchitan
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    Because Francisco Toledo,
    the painter, is from there.
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    He invited me to do work
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    and display it
    in the culture house
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    So the people could see
    we weren't just taking
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    but that we were also
    giving back.
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    I was there, more or less,
    six years.
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    I would go and come back,
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    and I was able
    to immerse myself
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    and have the cooperation
    of the people of Juchitan.
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    This is Toledo's aunt.
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    In Juchitan,
    homosexuality is permitted.
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    It's one of the very few places
    in Mexico that's very liberal.
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    Look, here's Magnolia.
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    I was buying beer
    with the women,
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    and Magnolia said, "Ooh,
    my love, can you photograph me?"
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    I told her, "Yes, of course."
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    Here's the moment
    where she's putting makeup on.
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    I went to the Juchitan market.
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    I went there because I knew
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    that the women would be
    more accepting of me,
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    so I sold tomatoes with them.
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    I saw everything they did.
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    Then this woman came.
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    Her name is Sulveda.
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    12 photos.
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    Only two iguanas remained alive.
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    They are sold to people to eat.
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    And I called this photo
    Our Lady of Iguanas.
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    Again, my religiousness
    comes out.
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    This work, I did
    with the Seris.
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    They are totally different
    people from the Juchitecas.
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    With the Seris,
    everything is very severe,
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    because they live in the desert.
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    I lived with them for a time,
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    not as long as I did
    in Juchitan.
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    These works were done
    more or less at the same time.
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    I started them in 1979.
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    I did another book
    about the slaughter of goats
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    by indigenous people who, for
    generations upon generations,
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    worked for rich Spanish
    employers.
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    They were paid very little.
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    And they always
    crossed themselves
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    before killing the goats.
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    That's why I gave the book
    the title
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    In the Name of the Father.
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    In each work,
    I find different things.
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    Here, I found
    this religious part.
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    It's like the sacrifice
    of Abraham.
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    I really like to photograph
    intense things.
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    This is a work that I did
    with the Cholos.
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    They are
    a very marginalized people
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    that were born
    in the United States,
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    and I had the opportunity
    to live and work with them
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    for a short while.
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    I began working with the Cholos
    in Los Angeles in the '80s.
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    And from there,
    I went to tijuana.
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    All Cholo influence.
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    I wanted to do
    an investigation.
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    But what happened is that
    I was only there two weeks.
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    I returned later.
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    It made me very depressed.
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    I'm very interested
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    in how a Mexican goes
    to the United States,
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    because for them,
    this is the American dream,
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    because here in Mexico,
    there aren't jobs.
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    What happens is, they don't know
    what they're going to find.
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    I went to do a tour
    of the southern United States.
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    It was the first time that I was
    taking landscape photographs.
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    I began to enter
    into the landscape.
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    I began learning about life
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    in the United States,
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    Where there are no people
    on the streets,
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    which is different from Mexico.
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    And now I mostly only photograph
    landscapes.
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    I went to India.
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    The first trip was about people.
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    Since then,
    I've gone four more times.
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    And now I made a book
    titled There is No One,
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    because there is no one.
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    There are only objects.
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    There are only landscapes.
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    I've always wanted to photograph
    the abstract
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    and now the rebars,
    the buildings,
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    things I never imagined
    photographing.
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    I just finished a project
    in L.A. earlier this year.
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    I was in L.A.
    for a month and a half.
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    It is called Criba del Cielo,
    Sieve of Sky.
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    It is like a grid, a net
    where the light passes through
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    or something that passes
    through the brain.
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    It is with the text
    of Fabienne Bradu,
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    who is a close friend of mine
    and a very good writer.
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    I have always said that for me,
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    the camera is just a pretext
    for knowing the world.
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    I am interested
    in what my eyes see
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    and what my heart feels.
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    Why grids?
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    It means prison,
    something like that,
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    Something that is enclosed.
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    Maybe I feel like
    I'm in prison myself.
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    Maybe I also feel locked up.
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    Maybe my camera is liberating me
    from those feelings.
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    It's what touches me,
    what moves me.
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    That is what I photograph.
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    - Hola, Aami.
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    Como estas?
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    - I photograph my grandchildren
    all the time.
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    Everybody has a photo album.
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    - [speaking spanish]
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    The interesting thing
    about her work
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    is that it always
    reinvents itself.
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    It's a work that has a huge
    opportunity to not repeat,
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    to not generate a style
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    but, more importantly,
    to search for or be an example
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    for what human beings can do
    with their lives.
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    - I am a composer,
    an interdisciplinary artist
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    thanks to my mother,
    of course.
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    Also to my father
    but mainly–
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    the rebel part,
    I got it from my mother.
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    [all speaking Spanish]
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    Also, my neuroses,
    I got it from my mother too.
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    [laughs]
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    - I
    studied architecture
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    thinking that afterwards
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    I would be dedicated
    to making movies,
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    a master's degree in film,
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    or that I would start
    taking photos.
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    And when I finished my degree,
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    sure that I would change paths
    or go to another place,
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    it was my mother who asked me
    to design her house.
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    That's the house that we're in.
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    The important thing
    is not the architecture.
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    it's the investigation one has.
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    And that, I learned as much
    from my mother as my father,
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    via my mother
    from Alvarez Bravo.
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    Architecture is a tool.
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    The important thing
    is investigation.
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    - [speaking spanish]
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    [laughter]
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    - I have a small exhibition
    that is up at the Tate Modern.
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    I never imagined
    being in the Tate Modern.
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    It is strange,
    because photography
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    has always been
    the redheaded stepchild
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    of the artistic disciplines.
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    And all of a sudden,
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    to be so close
    to such important painters,
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    it's strange.
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    But I'm very happy.
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    I think that any photographer
    is an investigator.
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    Photography is a pretext
    to know the world, to know life,
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    to know yourself.
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    If I were not a photographer,
    I would be very, very badly off.
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    I would have a very bad time,
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    because creativity is needed
    to keep moving forward.
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    (ambient electronic music)
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    To learn more about "Art in the Twenty-First Century"
  • 17:02 - 17:04
    and it's educational resources,
  • 17:04 - 17:08
    please visit us online at PBS.org/Art21
  • 17:09 - 17:13
    "Art in the Twenty-First Century" is available on DVD
  • 17:13 - 17:18
    To order, visit shopPBS.org or call 1-800-PLAY-PBS
  • 17:18 - 17:24
    (ambient electronic music)
Title:
Graciela Iturbide in "Investigation" - Season 7 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"Art in the Twenty-First Century" broadcast series
Duration:
17:32

English subtitles

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