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[ atmospheric electronic music ]
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[ EL ANATSUI ]
This is a group photograph.
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And in a group photograph,
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you are thinking about kinship,
you know.
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Kinship,
it's a particular group.
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And then they happen to be
close together.
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Originally,
they were spread wide apart.
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You know,
so what I've tried to do is,
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to bring them together
so that they are a group.
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I come from a family
of very many people,
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about 32 siblings,
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and– and probably
this is a reflection of that.
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I was born in Ghana.
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My mom died
when I was toddler,
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pretty young,
about two or three.
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And so I had to live
with my maternal uncle,
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you know, a reverend.
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And we lived in a mission house
off the presbyterian school.
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My life revolved
only around a mission house
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and the church,
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school, church, you know.
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And I remember that as a kid,
pre-kindergarten,
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I was intrigued by writings
on the doors of offices,
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you know, or even classrooms,
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you know, that I saw around me.
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And I used to sit down
and try to
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emulate, you know,
those writings.
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I didn't know what they meant,
but, uh–
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and I remember
that the letter "G"
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Was more intriguing to me
than all others– all of–
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well, I don't know why.
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Maybe because it has
so many appendages or–
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it's not like "C" or the others.
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It's a "C"
with something else on it.
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You know,
it was intriguing to me.
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I went to art school in Ghana,
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which was an offshoot
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of the Goldsmiths art school
in London.
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At the time I went
to university,
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I didn't know about anybody
who was living as an artist.
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You know,
you knew about art teachers.
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I met art teachers
in the secondary school.
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but there were more teachers
than artists, you know.
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And then I was wondering
how one was going to be
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an artist
living purely on art.
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We knew about doctors.
We knew about lawyers.
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I constantly kept thinking,
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"What precisely do you do
as an artist?"
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I think that has helped
focus me a lot, you know,
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At least to concentrate
on the practice of art
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and see what I can
get out of it.
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As a matter of principle,
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I do not provide
installation instructions
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for my works.
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There's no one particular way
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that these are
supposed to be installed.
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- So to the left
a little bit.
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Right there.
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All right, spear away.
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[ EL ANATSUI ] Since they are so free
and so loose and so flexible,
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It would be difficult
to have a specific format
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for any one of them at anytime.
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- I don't have any other space
that I can hit.
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- Amanda?
- Yeah?
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- Okay if we start
snipping the ties off?
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- I think it is, yeah.
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- Okay. Yeah.
Start snipping those ties.
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When they lift that bar out,
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you're gonna need to lift up
the work, yeah.
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- We're good.
Lift up the bar.
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[tool whirring]
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[ EL ANATSUI ] "Stressed World" is the title
that I give my current work.
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- Yeah, I want to create some...
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some crazy here.
- Yeah.
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- Yeah. Okay. Okay. Okay.
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[ EL ANATSUI ] There are so many conflicts
going on in the world right now,
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Man-made conflicts,
natural conflicts:
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earthquakes, tsunamis, wars.
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I'm not sure about all these–
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leave you in a state of
kind of siege.
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Yeah, your mind
is in a state of siege.
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- I think it's okay.
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- It's nice.
[metal clinking]
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- Be careful of your wrists, man.
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- The media I've worked with
so far have been
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metal, ceramic,
and wood in different forms.
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Working with strips of wood,
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I changed my approach
a little bit,
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You know, by working not with
strips of wood that's processed,
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but then wood
which has been used by humans...
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and then transform
it into something
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that you contemplate,
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not something you use.
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I like the drape of that.
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Okay, Sally, I want some
relaxation in some places,
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and, yeah.
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- It's different every time.
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- Yeah, every time
it's different.
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That's the whole idea.
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Supposed to change
with every venue
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and every space.
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[ EL ANATSUI ] The ceramic pieces belong
to a series that I did.
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It was called broken pots.
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In most parts of Africa,
when a pot is broken,
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it's not the end of its life.
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This idea of regeneration,
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you know,
giving form to new life,
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bringing about new hope,
you know.
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And I did these pieces
at the time that also–
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already in Nigeria.
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And the economy of Ghana
was really at its lowest point.
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You know, and I thought that
that was my own way
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of affirming something positive,
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destruction as a prerequisite
for new ideas or for new growth.
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When I started working
with the bottle caps,
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I was purely doing sculpture.
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and somehow, inadvertently,
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the color scheme
of the bottle caps
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happened to replicate that of
a very popular fabric in Ghana,
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The kente cloth.
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Colors of kente cloth
are traditionally
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the reds, the blacks,
the yellows.
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That created problems,
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because when people start
looking at it as textiles,
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the tendency is for them to stop
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looking for any meaning
beyond that.
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What are bottle caps?
Liquor.
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How did liquor
come into my culture?
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And what does it mean?
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Three continents
has something to do with
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the initial ideas that I had
about bottle caps.
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When the European traders came
to Africa for the first time,
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they brought items
to trade with,
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things like drink,
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because, eventually,
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drinks were exchanged for slaves
who were brought to America
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to grow more cotton
and sugarcane
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to make more drink
and then ship to Europe.
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So the idea of three continents,
you know,
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and how drink was a link factor
between the three.
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When I started working
with these bottle caps,
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I thought it was gonna be
a very short run.
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Then as time went on,
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I saw that the possibilities
are just endless.
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Initially, I wasn't
concerned with color.
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Now I'm concerned with color
like a painter.
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Even the modes of display,
they are beginning to expand.
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They happen to be displayed
predominantly on the wall.
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[laughs]
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But it could be on anything.
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It could be on the floor.
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I've showed a couple of them
on hedges, you know, on plants.
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You know,
the concerns of a sculptor
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and the concerns of a painter
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are inherent
in each of the works that I do.
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I went to Nigeria
because I had an appointment
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to teach in the university.
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I've lived in Nigeria
about 36 years now.
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My assistants are young men
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from around the vicinity
of the studio.
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Basically, these are people
who just finished high school
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and awaiting
entry into university.
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It takes quite some time
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for people to pass
the university entrance exam.
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And so while they are waiting
and preparing for that day,
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find time to help me
in the studio
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and earn some– a living.
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Probably because I pay so well
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that a lot of them do come
to ask whether they could help.
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Anybody I bring in has to
undergo some basic training
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on how to stitch
the pieces together,
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some basic skills.
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The whole process
and end product
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all have to do with freedom,
flexibility, you know.
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so right from the instructions
they, you know–
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you leave a lot of room
for people to play around.
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So the resulting work tends
to have that flexibility in it.
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Basically, I work in this way
that–
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where I pick a medium
or a process,
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and I work with it
for a long period, years.
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And it has to take something
more powerful or more demanding
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to really take me away from it.
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At the back of my mind,
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I'm seriously looking out
for anything
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that can come and displace this.
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[laughs]
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But it would take something
really strong to do that,
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because I find that each day
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I go into handle
these bottle caps,
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they keep generating
fresh ideas.
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I lived with my maternal uncle
in a different town
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from where my father
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and the rest of my brothers
and sisters lived.
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And so I had
very little exposure
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to the textiles tradition
that was very strong with them.
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And in art school,
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we were introduced
to all the areas of art.
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And the one that least
attracted me was textiles.
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You know?
[laughs]
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But then– I find it intriguing
that what I do now is very much
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aligned to– like me trying
to get away from textiles,
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but textiles is following--
[laughs]
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following me.
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I don't know.
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I think the idea of recycle,
you know,
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I've always kicked against it.
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Recycling has to do
with the industrial process,
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And that's not what I do.
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I don't, for instance,
retain the bottle caps
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back as bottle caps.
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Yeah, you know, a new life.
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And make them not objects
that do something utilitarian,
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but objects of contemplation.
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[metal clinking]
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- Here we go.
Come around here like this.
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Go like that.
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Okay, it's a very long–
[laughs]
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It's a very long route.
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Okay, so let's start from here.
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Actually, the river
should be emptying out.
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and then the source should be–
- Coming out--
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- In the middle of, yeah.
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So this one's come.
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This is called Digital River.
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And it's composed of digits,
you know.
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And so it compels one to always
try to play around with it.
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- This way.
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It should begin to swing back...
Yeah.
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So that it would end
maybe somewhere here.
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The rivers flow.
They do change their course.
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And you know,
they cut out oxbow lakes.
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And all kinds of things and–
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you know, I think my work has
principally been about change,
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You know,
and nonfixity of things.
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You know,
the fact that things are there,
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and they have to grow old
and change
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and do all kinds of things,
you know.
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It's not because I'm old now.
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[laughs]