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Robert Ryman in "Paradox" - Season 4 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21

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    ROBERT RYMAN:
    The real purpose of painting is…
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    is to give pleasure.
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    I mean that’s really uh the…
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    the main thing that it’s about.
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    I mean there can be the story,
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    you know there can be a lot of history behind it,
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    there can be…
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    but when it, you know when it…
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    you don’t have to know all of those things uh to…
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    to receive the pleasure from a painting.
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    Uh, it’s like listening to some music.
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    You don’t have to know the score of a 
    symphony in order to appreciate the symphony.
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    You can just listen to the sounds.
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    In Nashville when I was growing up,
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    you didn’t hear anything but 
    country music on the radio
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    and juke boxes at that time and I 
    was never really interested in that.
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    I was more interested in uh jazz.
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    I would hunt around late at 
    night on the radio trying to find
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    a New York station or something 
    where I could hear something else.
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    It was the music really that was 
    more interesting for me than…
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    than painting which I’d never seen.
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    So when I came to New York,
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    it was the music that was 
    the most important thing.
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    I was playing bop...bebop. (LAUGHS)
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    You know I was...Charlie Parker and Zoot Sims,
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    (LAUGHS)
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    and I think that had an influence on
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    my approach to painting because
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    you played on a structure and 
    you learned your instrument
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    and then you played within the structure.
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    Well, it seemed like a logical 
    thing to begin painting that way.
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    You know I would learn about paint and then
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    I would learn about what 
    you could do with the paint.
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    In painting, something has to look 
    easy even though it might not be easy.
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    That’s an important part of painting,
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    that it has to have that feeling of…
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    like it just happened.
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    It used to be when I was playing,
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    we would say tunes, no one 
    uses the term tunes anymore,
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    you know it’s songs.
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    If someone is singing 
    something and telling a story
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    and it’s very similar to 
    representational painting where,
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    you know, you tell a story with 
    the paint and with symbols.
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    I wasn’t interested in painting a narrative,
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    telling a story with a painting.
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    I thought the painting should just be 
    about what it’s about and not (LAUGHS)
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    not about other things.
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    One thing that I learned from music 
    that I’ve carried over to painting was
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    if you are an entertainer, you have to entertain.
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    I didn’t want to do that.
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    The other way was to just 
    to do whatever you wanted
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    and the audience had to come to you or not.
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    And uh that’s...that was my 
    approach right from the beginning.
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    Uh I wasn’t going to be an entertainer.
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    In all of my paintings, I discover things.
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    Sometimes I’m surprised at the 
    result, but I know what I’m doing.
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    (LAUGHS) Even though I let...even 
    though I don’t know what I’m doing.
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    (LAUGHS)
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    Always...my approach uh tends 
    to be uh from experiments.
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    I generally do a lot of 
    tests before I do paintings.
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    Tests on paints to see which is the 
    best thing to use on a certain material,
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    how fastening is going to work, how the 
    light is going to work, things like that.
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    I’m not involved with any kind of art movement or…
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    or I’m not a scholar and I’m not a historian.
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    I just look at it as solving problems
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    and working on the painting 
    and a visual experience.
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    I don’t have any assistants.
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    I like to do it all myself.
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    I like to know what’s going on all the time.
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    It’s coming along. (LAUGHS)
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    When I was just beginning to paint, I…
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    I thought I have to become 
    not afraid of the paint.
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    Not afraid of the cost of the paint, you know,
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    not afraid of wasting it and I would…
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    I smeared some on my hand and just put it down on…
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    just…
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    wasted some paint so to speak, so 
    that I would not be afraid of it.
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    I like to do something that I 
    don’t know exactly how to do.
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    When I finish the problem, I 
    don’t have to go on with it.
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    I’m more interested in finding 
    what else I can do that…
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    that’s more of a challenge for me.
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    I would never show a painting 
    that I didn’t feel right about.
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    I would never let it out.
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    There might have been a few paintings that 
    I’ve destroyed through the years that…
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    some I’ve wish I hadn’t but it wasn’t 
    that the paintings maybe were not good,
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    but they weren’t what I 
    wanted at the moment and so I…
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    you know I rejected them.
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    But usually I work them 
    through so that they are okay.
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    RYMAN: Could you get the hot spots, kind of move…
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    move the hot spots down so the wall is 
    more even and not so hot at the top?
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    SPEAKER: That’s easy.
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    RYMAN: I work with real light.
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    I mean the light is not really painted 
    into the painting in an illusionistic way,
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    as you would paint a landscape or something,
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    but my paintings work with real light.
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    It’s not just a matter of 
    daylight or incandescent light,
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    it’s also the quality of the light.
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    But sometimes, you want a 
    softer light to bring it alive.
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    I think of my painting as not really as abstract,
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    because I don’t abstract from anything.
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    It’s involved with real visual aspects 
    of what you really are looking at,
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    whether it’s wood or...or you 
    see the paint and the metal
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    and how it’s put together and 
    how it works with the wall
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    and how it works with the light.
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    I use real light and I use real surface.
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    I don’t use any illusion.
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    It’s the real thing that you see.
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    It’s a real experience. (LAUGHS)
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    The paintings move outward 
    in a sense, aesthetically.
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    They...they go out into the space of the room
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    and they certainly involve 
    the wall itself that it’s on.
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    What you’re seeing is really what it is.
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    Anything else will dilute 
    it or you know disturb it.
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    I never thought of white as being a color.
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    White could do things that 
    other colors could not do.
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    White has a tendency to make things visible.
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    You can see more of the nuance.
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    It’s been only recently where I 
    actually did some white paintings and…
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    which I call white.
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    I began with that square 
    in the ‘50s actually and I…
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    somehow it’s become so natural to me that 
    I just don’t think of it any other way.
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    A square has always been, you know,
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    just an equal sided space that you could work with
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    and it didn’t have the feeling of a landscape or,
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    you know, some kind of a window or a doorway 
    that we usually associate with rectangles.
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    It’s just a very neutral kind of a space.
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    Sometimes after I finish a group of paintings,
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    I’m not sure what to do next.
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    And it may be I have to wait a while, 
    you know maybe a month or...or so.
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    Two months.
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    You know I don’t worry about it…
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    and then slowly things fall into 
    place and I try a few things and…
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    and then I realize that what else could be done
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    and what interests me at the moment.
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    It’s...it’s called PHILADELPHIA PROTO…
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    well, actually it’s called 
    THIRD PHILADELPHIA PROTOTYPE.
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    The panels are not really the painting.
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    The painting consists of the two walls.
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    The original surface of the panels are the same.
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    Even from the first showing.
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    The only thing that changes is the…
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    is the edge which goes onto the wall itself.
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    Some of the tape is going off 
    of the panel onto the wall,
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    and others seem to just appear on the wall.
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    Which tells you that it’s…
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    it was not really the first time it was done.
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    That’s done on purpose because I don’t 
    want it to be the exact same each time.
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    The light is extremely important 
    in the way it affects the panels.
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    In the afternoon, later when the 
    sun moves around to this side the…
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    the panels will look very different.
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    The softer light brings out the 
    nuances and you can see the…
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    the panels have a glow which would be 
    wiped out in a strong straight on light.
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    Yesterday was the first time 
    I actually saw the space.
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    It should be a soft, quiet experience.
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    It’s nice to look at.
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    I like this.
Title:
Robert Ryman in "Paradox" - Season 4 - "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:
13:59

English (United States) subtitles

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