-
[New York Close Up]
-
[Wu Tang Clan's "C.R.E.A.M." playing in the
background]
-
I don't want to see what I'm working on.
-
The head is like the only thing on your body
that you can't really see,
-
so, I want to make that part without seeing
it.
-
Kind of like this.
-
[Diana Al-Hadid, Artist]
-
The work that I make mostly starts without
knowing very much about what I'm doing.
-
I surrender to that.
-
I want to know what I don't know, kind of--
-
want to know the limits of my thinking.
-
A lot of my work starts with the material
and starts with the careful study of
-
what it can do or what it can't do.
-
It's getting a material to misbehave.
-
--[AL-HADID] If we start it here and let it connect
to that...
-
--[ASSISTANT] Okay.
-
[AL-HADID] Asking a good question produces really
interesting answers or amazing discoveries.
-
--[AL-HADID] So then maybe we start bridging these,
like...
-
--[ASSISTANT] Yeah.
-
[AL-HADID] Artists are making those discoveries
all the time, every day, in their studio.
-
--[AL-HADID] And they're going to go on here...-ish.
-
Maybe.
-
I don't make work because I'm interested in
something.
-
I don't want to explain it to you.
-
I'm making it to become interested.
-
["Diana Al-Hadid's Suspended Reality"]
-
[1986; Cleveland, Ohio]
-
Well, I probably had an atypical childhood.
-
When I was in first grade, when I first moved
here from Syria,
-
you know, I didn't speak English, and couldn't
read and write.
-
I was the weird immigrant kid that drew a
lot.
-
[LAUGHS] I should show you what I was drawing.
-
[Drawings, c. 1990–94]
-
My grandma, she's a painter, and she told
me if you could learn to draw hands,
-
and people, then you were really an artist.
-
So [LAUGHS] I tried that.
-
I think a lot of kids draw still life, or
draw from a photograph,
-
but, I wanted my drawing to look more real
than the photograph. [LAUGHS]
-
[MARIANNE BOESKY] That's amazing! Look at
that!
-
Okay, who would've thought
you could make a drawing like this.
-
[AL-HADID] [LAUGHS] I started drawing like that.
-
[BOESKY] This is incredible. [ALL
LAUGH]
-
[Marianne Boesky -- Gallerist]
-
[AL-HADID] So, yeah, fast forward to now,
-
I think that all of that, probably, middle-school
anxiety--
-
you know, every little pen mark, every little
pencil--
-
was a building of layers and developing something
larger.
-
You know, I have some rogue interest in physics
and math.
-
Sculpture is inherently mathematical.
-
It lives in this world. It has to obey the
laws of gravity, unfortunately.
-
I don't know, I think I have painting envy.
-
Like, I was looking up northern Renaissance
or Mannerist paintings...
-
[Paintings, c. 1420–1528]
-
They have so many more liberties in terms
of scale and mass,
-
and especially gravity and levity and illusion.
-
You know, I'm dealing with actual space and
actual gravity,
-
and they get to do things that I wish I could
make; but, it's not possible.
-
[Sound of metal being sawed]
-
[Marianne Boesky Gallery -- Chelsea]
-
For me, to get a sculpture to lift off the
floor, that's the first way to rebel.
-
It's just the main event.
-
I do go to great lengths [LAUGHS] to get things
off the ground,
-
I don't know if people realize, how...
-
I mean, always have things just...argh! It's
really horrible.
-
They want to fall, and they don't fall, miraculously,
-
But that's because I work really hard at getting
them not to fall.
-
That's what I labor with every day, and I
think what I want left
-
is not to burden you with all of those mechanical
details.
-
["At the Vanishing Point" -- 2012]
-
["Divided Line" -- 2012]
-
Making these large works, what concerns me
the most
-
is how to get you to pay attention to weight
and volume and space
-
and interiors and exteriors.
-
["Antonym" -- 2012]
-
I don't know, I want to make something that
seems really improbable.
-
["Suspended After Image" -- 2012]
-
I have enough reality in my life,
-
and, not that I live in some weird fantasy
world,
-
but I want to weigh in a little bit on the
other side.