-
[Bed Stuy, Brooklyn]
-
[October 2013]
-
[ZACARIAS] Yeah, I think like, it needs to
be like that...
-
[Marela Zacarías, Artist]
-
Because we need it to come out to like here,
you know?
-
[New York Close Up]
-
Perfecto!
-
So let's get started!
-
["Marela Zacarías Goes Big & Goes Home"]
-
We don’t want to cover the whole thing.
-
I guess the trick is just to barely, barely
touch it.
-
Because the more...
-
Like, if you push, it’s going to start changing
shape.
-
[Marela has been commissioned to make a piece
for the U.S. Consulate in Monterrey, Mexico.]
-
[It will be her largest sculpture to date.]
-
I painted murals for ten years.
-
And while making this work and being in the
community is wonderful,
-
there’s a part of it, of making public art,
that is a little constraining,
-
where the creative process only lasts
-
for the time that you’re making this little
mockup.
-
There was part me of that needed more,
-
that needed that moment of creating while
you're making.
-
Yeah this part of the process is pretty much
all instinct...instinctive.
-
I just try to find like pressure points and
tension in the mesh
-
and it kind of tells me where to go.
-
There’s twenty different pieces that come
together into one.
-
They all fit into each other...like a puzzle.
-
[January 2014]
-
My nature is very colorful.
-
You know, like I want to express color.
-
Once I choose colors I have to kind of record
what I’m doing.
-
I number all the colors that I use.
-
We’ve created our own kind of color numbers,
you know?
-
This piece actually has sixty-seven colors.
-
Part of it is very intuitive, the way that
I’m choosing colors,
-
but then I kind of have to put down a record
of those decisions.
-
I’m not that kind of personality
-
where I like to plan and I’m organized,
you know?
-
It’s something that I’ve had to learn.
-
This is 31, yeah?
-
And then this is 5.
-
This is 22.
-
Like I would probably just extend those lines,
-
like up to here.
-
Yeah.
-
[ROOPENIAN] So I’m just usually looking
at the map
-
and trying to get a point
-
where I can know generally what her intention
is
-
and not have to be back and forth with each
detail.
-
Because we live in Brooklyn
-
and we can’t have space that just lets us
-
put up what we want to see...
-
I never quite get to see it fully put together.
-
Marela's always got a secret in her back pocket,
-
which is the final piece.
-
[ZACARIAS] I’ve always felt the influence
of patterns from textiles.
-
The ways that color is being used in some
of these is sophisticated.
-
Like for example here,
-
you know, just the uses of pink with this
-
kind of earthy red and then a little yellow.
-
And it’s you know kind of unpredictable
and exciting.
-
That’s sort of something that I look to
do in my own work.
-
Oh this is mom, with me, in Mexico.
-
My mom is an anthropologist.
-
So she actually led, like, the research on
this project.
-
These ancient cultures used their clothing
-
as a way to show their relationship
-
to their universe, to the earth, to their
community.
-
And the amazing thing is that
-
a lot of these symbols from the Mayan era
-
are still being used today.
-
So there's some kind of a cultural resistance
-
that happened through this clothing.
-
[PEW] Marela, you know, has lived half of
her life,
-
or over half of her life now,
-
in the U.S. even though she's from Mexico,
so...
-
There's a beautiful aspect that it is, kind
of,
-
the return of her gifts back to, kind of,
her home,
-
the homeland--
-
even though it will be the U.S. consulate,
but...
-
[LAUGHS]
-
[ZACARIAS] And this 36.
-
[PEW] All that’s really left here...
-
I mean, the colors and patterns, obviously,
-
are really shaping up here now
-
and just to kind of dial in on some last taping
and designs there
-
and then we’re going to be pretty much done.
-
[February 2014]
-
This is usually, you know...
-
It's like two or three all-nighters.
-
Tearing out hair and biting nails.
-
So yeah, the next month,
-
Saturday night we have a baby shower for this
piece.
-
And then the piece leaves on Tuesday.
-
There’s a truck involved
-
and then there’s a plane involved at some
point.
-
And then it lands in Mexico.
-
[Monterrey, Mexico]
-
[June 2014]
-
[U.S. Consulate General Monterrey]
-
[Marela is showing her work in Mexico for the first time.]
-
[ZACARIAS] Thinking back to when I was sixteen
-
and was coming to the States,
-
I was really interested in the Mexican muralists.
-
They were able to paint the history of Mexico
-
in these very important buildings.
-
Even though the politics have changed so much,
-
you can still go to the National Palace
-
and see the story of colonization and the
Revolution.
-
It was kind of crazy that that this opportunity
came
-
for me to do it in a place that is also
-
a building that is going to be there for a long time
-
and that has these connotations of history.
-
The piece can live for a long time.
-
[Jorge Herrera Lavín, Father]
-
[LAVIN, IN SPANISH] This is fabulous.
-
It’s like, in a space so strict and full
of rules...
-
it's like, this gives it a little flexibility.
-
I don’t know.
-
It's like it reduces and tempers the rigid
protocols.
-
[ZACARIAS] I mean, there’s so many problems
with the immigration system today.
-
The relationship between these two countries--
-
the way that undocumented workers are treated,
-
the way that people are being deported.
-
And yet, there’s stories of people who come
here and,
-
like me, are now able to make art.
-
I mean, I’ve been very lucky.
-
So, for me to do this piece,
-
it was like really meeting myself
-
kind of in the middle of it.
-
I want to connect to the people that are,
like,
-
going through this transition.
-
You’re changing when you’re going through
the consulate,
-
not just because you’re getting a visa or
a green card,
-
but your life is changing.
-
I know that there’s part of me that has
gone through this
-
that wants to give something to the people
-
who are going through that change.