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Doreen Garner Sculpts Our Trauma | Art21 "New York Close Up"

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    ["New York Close Up"]
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    I try to create a traumatic experience.
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    I want the audience to walk away feeling
    like they can't unsee what they just saw.
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    Something that is burned in and lasts,
    and you can never get rid of it.
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    ["Red Hook, Brooklyn"]
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    ["Doreen Garner Sculpts Our Trauma"]
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    I use the body in my work
    mostly because of the trauma that I have,
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    [Doreen Garner, Artist]
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    watching how one small thing
    can make the entire body fail.
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    I'm from Philly.
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    My sister, when she was eight years old,
    she had a massive stroke.
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    There was basically a blood vessel that burst,
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    and she was left physically and mentally disabled.
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    She lived until she was eighteen
    and then passed away in 2007.
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    --This could have used more vaseline.
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    When I was younger,
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    I would end up spending a lot of time
    with her in the hospital.
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    I remember one kid that had his leg
    in this crazy metal cage
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    with pins in his leg.
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    All these things that are burned into my brain
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    are slowly starting to seep back out
    into the real world.
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    I'm working on this show,
    "White Man On A Pedestal."
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    All of my work is focusing on J. Marion Sims,
    who's known as the father of modern gynecology,
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    but made a lot of his progress through
    torturing Black women--
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    three of which are documented:
    Betsey, Anarcha, and Lucy.
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    So he ended up performing a
    vesicovaginal fistula repair on Anarcha
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    over thirty times in the course of five years,
    without anesthesia.
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    He said that Black people
    experience pain less
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    so he didn't need to use anesthesia on them.
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    But it was just an excuse
    for him to torture them.
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    And if there was a patient that didn't seem
    like they would make it through,
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    he would just leave them in the field to die.
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    --It's weird, this process of basically giving
    him a rub down.
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    --Because it's like a caring notion, but I
    have no care for this guy so...
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    --I guess I should just think of it as caring
    for my own work.
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    His statue in Central Park,
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    it's currently up for debate on whether it
    should stay there or not.
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    I think they should take down the statue,
    and they should chop off the head,
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    and give it to me so I can use it
    for other projects.
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    Pearls and Swarovski crystals and glass beads
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    end up standing in for
    fat cells and muscle tissue.
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    It's not about creating a gruesome work.
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    It's about creating a work that has
    subtle nuances,
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    where you don't really completely know
    how to feel,
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    and maybe that's what stays with you.
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    I'm doing a silicone skin cast on Sims's body--
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    peeling that off
    and then using that for a surgery
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    where I'm performing
    vesicovaginal fistula repair
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    that he performed on Black women.
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    Some crazy shit is going to go down.
    [LAUGHS]
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    --Yeah touch it, feel it.
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    --You can smack his face if you want,
    punch him.
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    I ended up buying an endoscopy camera,
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    so when it goes inside
    people will be able to see
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    what's going on inside the body,
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    as well as on the outside.
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    When you think about ways that
    Black people have been used in this country,
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    it does just come down to the body.
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    Extra sets of hands to do tasks,
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    people to take out
    your anger and frustration on,
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    people to do experiments on--
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    just disposable bodies.
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    Me as an artist,
    I'm operating in a really weird place.
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    I'm slicing up the skin,
    I'm chopping up the bodies.
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    I'm a Black woman horrified by these actions,
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    and yet I have to show all these actions,
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    so that it's not a situation where people
    are able to overlook this information anymore.
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    It's not a desire that I naturally have,
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    it's just what I have to do.
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    [In January 2018, the City of New York decided
    to relocate the Sims statue]
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    [to Green-Wood Cemetery
    in Brooklyn, where he is buried.]
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    [The statue will be installed without its
    pedestal.]
Title:
Doreen Garner Sculpts Our Trauma | Art21 "New York Close Up"
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"New York Close Up" series
Duration:
07:39

English subtitles

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