-
[Tania Bruguera: "The Francis Effect"]
-
[BRUGUERA] Hi guys, how are you doing?
-
Hi, how are you doing?
-
Hi guys, how are you doing?
-
[WOMAN] Fine, you?
-
[BRUGUERA] Good. I'm...
-
Hi guys.
-
Hi guys, how are you doing? Hi.
-
[WOMAN] Hi.
-
[BRUGUERA] I'm one of the artists in the Latin
American exhibition.
-
And, one of the...
-
[MAN] Oh, we just came from there!
-
[BRUGUERA] Yeah?
-
And one of the projects I'm doing
-
is a petition to ask Pope Fran...
-
[WOMAN] But I'm not American.
-
[BRUGUERA] That's okay.
-
Where are you from, Italy?
-
[WOMAN] Si.
-
[BRUGUERA, SPEAKING IN ITALIAN]
-
[BRUGUERA] One of the projects I'm doing is
a petition I created
-
to ask Pope Francis to give Vatican City citizenship...
-
[MAN] Okay.
-
[BRUGUERA] ...to immigrants nobody wants,
-
like undocumented and refugees,
-
no matter what religion they profess,
-
no matter what country they are from,
-
no matter what race they are.
-
[WOMAN #1, IN ITALIAN] Sign, sign!
-
Sign, sign!
-
[WOMAN #2, IN ITALIAN] What is it?
-
[WOMAN #1, IN ITALIAN] It is a petition to ask Pope Francis to give undocumented
-
immigrants citizenship from the Vatican.
-
[WOMAN #2, IN ITALIAN] Oh, great!
-
[BRUGERA] I'm an artist who works with immigration
issues.
-
I want to get into people's minds
-
and people's political imaginary.
-
For me, it's really nice when I talk to people
-
and they kind of get the idea.
-
You can see something in the expression.
-
And I think it's interesting because
-
a lot of people know it's impossible.
-
Like, they say, "Well, this is impossible."
-
But the impossible is only impossible until
somebody makes it possible.
-
[WOMAN] Oh, yeah, I can't do that.
-
[BRUGUERA] Okay, why?
-
[WOMAN] Because my family came here legally,
-
and so does everyone else.
-
[BRUGUERA] But...
-
[WOMAN] I can't...
-
[WOMAN] No, it's okay.
-
[BRUGUERA] No?
-
[BRUGUERA, IN SPANISH] And you are from Argentina?
-
[WOMAN, IN SPANISH] Yes.
-
[BRUGUERA, IN SPANISH] Look at that! You are
the first Argentines that do not sign!
-
Why not?
-
[WOMAN, IN SPANISH] The truth is that
-
I must be very invested in the issue
-
and agree with your project in order to sign.
-
[BRUGUERA, IN SPANISH] Of course.
-
If you have any questions I can answer them.
-
[MALE STREET PERFORMER SINGING "NEW YORK,
NEW YORK"]
-
♪ I'm gonna make a brand new start of it ♪
-
♪ Here in ol' New York ♪
-
♪ And if I can make it there ♪
-
♪ I'll make it anywhere... ♪
-
[BRUGUERA] The Pope has a double function.
-
It is a head of state,
-
but at the same time, it's a head of the church.
-
"The Francis Effect" is an art piece
-
that wants to talk about the Catholic church,
-
specifically the Vatican as a political entity.
-
The Vatican is a recognized state
-
that was conceived out of an idea--
-
in this case, a religious idea.
-
So, what if we have all the places in the
world
-
in which people gathered together out of an
idea
-
and not out of a piece of land that belonged
to your ancestors.
-
That's the Pangea.
-
[WOMAN] This is what the continents used to
look like...
-
[BRUGUERA] Super... Yeah, exactly.
-
[WOMAN] ...before they got split up by earthquakes.
-
[MAN] Okay.
-
[BRUGUERA] And then it was way before countries
existed
-
and borders existed,
-
so when everybody could go wherever they want,
-
without visas and papers.
-
The Pope was in Lampedusa,
-
and he made a pretty emotional speech there.
-
Very symbolic.
-
The table had the shape of a boat,
-
so it was like an art piece, you know?
-
It was like an installation.
-
The Pope has been very outspoken
-
about treating immigrants differently.
-
And he came up with the globalization of indifference,
-
as a concept, that I really liked.
-
I feel, like many other people,
-
that this is a problem that has to be solved
on a global scale,
-
with international institutions.
-
Immigrants do not need charity; they need
papers.
-
Let's take the Pope's words and ask him to
walk the...
-
Walk the talk? That's how you say it?
-
[BRUGUERA, IN ITALIAN] Are you also a Methodist?
-
Are you an atheist?
-
I am also an atheist. Ok, thank you.
-
Have a nice day.
-
[BRUGUERA] This is very simple performance
art.
-
I'm interacting with the audience one to one.
-
I decided that I was going to produce art
for people
-
who do not think like me.
-
[BRUGUERA] ...anywhere.
-
You tell me one country, and I'll tell you
if there is immigrants there.
-
[WOMAN] Syria?
-
[BRUGUERA] Uh, yes, there are, actually.
-
[BRUGUERA] It's harder, I know.
-
But I think it's more satisfying because
-
the friction that you can create
-
when you're having these conversations
-
is more fulfilling for me
-
than just, like, a little pat on the shoulder.
-
But the signature is kind of the theatrics
that you need
-
for people who don't believe in art--
-
people who don't believe in the power of ideas.
-
At the same, it is a way to mobilize people
-
to think the impossible, you know?
-
Like, what if somebody actually decides to
say,
-
"Yes, I'll give all the immigrants in the
world,"
-
"who are undocumented or refugees,"
-
"their papers."
-
So they can be seen other than illegal or
a negative way.
-
Even if they don't sign, that they think about
it, you know?
-
And then put the little seed in their head.
-
That's for me what art is.
-
[GIRL, IN SPANISH] They should.
-
[BRUGUERA, IN SPANISH] Yes they should. It's
only fair, right?
-
I can't ask you to sign because you are minors.
-
You need your parents to authorize you
-
because you are minors.
-
But yes, at the very least I can give you
-
our website so that you can get the information.
-
[BOY, IN SPANISH] Mom, come!
-
Dad, come!