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Lari Pittman:
I think as chaotic as American culture is—
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sadly, ironically, or even perversely—
I thrive on that.
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I’m able to carve out
a tremendous amount of freedom
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and even more particularly in Los Angeles.
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I can control this idea of aesthetics and beauty—
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micromanage it more here
than I could in cultural situations
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where there is such a strong,
established code of aesthetics—
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that it’s still the wild west on some levels,
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that you can still paint
it any which way you want.
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I want to offer a painting that
somehow the viewer has to stand in front of it
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and almost not believe it.
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But in the act of not believing it,
what they’re actually seeing,
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they get swept away in it.
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Everything about it is fake and artificial,
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but they get transported somewhere far away.
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That’s a great thing.
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The work is visually available to everybody.
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Multiple viewers can approach it very differently.
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For example, I’m always excited when
the UPS man or the water man comes in,
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to the front of the studio, and makes a delivery—
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and they immediately just respond
to the work and thumbs up,
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that type of thing.
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I will not high five though.
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But I’m also interested that
the work occupy a denser,
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critical territory that would
require a different type of audience,
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maybe a different type of visual literacy.
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The work is not confined to one demographic.
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The work has the capacity to
navigate between these very,
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very distant polls of the
populist and the elitist.
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There’s a very, very strong
Mediterranean core to who I am.
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And quite frankly I need a lot of sun.
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I was born in Glendale, California,
but my formative years were in Colombia.
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My mother is Colombian.
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My father is southern,
from the United States,
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from a Protestant background.
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So I grew up in a very...not
a contradictory world,
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but a hybrid world.
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I had a pet chicken named Jaime,
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that I remember my aunt
Ligia bought for me at Sears
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when we were living in Colombia.
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Then we moved to my mother’s
family town near the equator.
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I was not going to leave Jaime behind.
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My father asked the captain or the pilot
if I could bring the chicken on my lap
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and that was fine,
it was all cleared.
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My grandmother was with us
living for a while in Cali
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and I requested that we make
a traveling outfit for Jaime,
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so we made a vest.
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I was just very proud and I was never made fun of.
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It was just that kind of
idea of totally normative.
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And so my father was with me
and I was allowed to have my chicken,
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fully dressed for travel on my lap.
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I think that that kind of pre-condition of
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allowing me to express a fey side,
I guess, as a young boy,
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was given full reign and never, ever commented on,
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and I think that that’s why the
decorative aspect of the work
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comes systemically, organically,
naturally to me because
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it was really allowed to bloom and blossom
and wasn’t curtailed or curbed when I was a child.
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I’m grateful for having a charmed life
and a certain amount of privilege
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I’m very excited and thankful for.
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But even within that framework of
living somewhat in a bubble,
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I think what keeps me radicalized is
being aware of the overwhelming hatred
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that is exhibited by the American population
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and through actual legislation
against homosexuals.
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I can lead quite a pretty life (LAUGHS),
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but it’s always quickly clarified by those
very aggressive strains in American culture which,
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in a way, wonderfully puts me in my place.
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I will not leave painting.
I won’t leave it.
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I won’t leave it down.
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I think it comes from a deep cultural pathology
that maybe homosexuals might have.
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That is, you fix something up—
that kind of service component of one’s kind,
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of looking at things and fixing them up.
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That’s kind of how I looked at
painting in the ‘70s,
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because it was a completely
abandoned thing.
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And I was kind of thrilled that it was abandoned.
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And I maybe had a chance to fix it up.
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The impetus for this painting
really comes from Mexican retablo
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which is a devotional painting on tin
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and I think it dates roughly
from mid to late 19th Century.
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I’m an avid collector of these anonymous painters—
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of these retablos that were
used as devotional imagery.
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I’m attracted to them ironically as an atheist.
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I’m attracted to religious art
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simply because it usually
shows a hyperbolic moment
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like the suffering or martyrdom of the saint—
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or, in this case, a very dramatic moment
in the life of Christ.
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So I do look at this religious image
through a secular lens.
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And then, actually,
this little painting was able to
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give me the cues for the color
palette in the painting itself.
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Although now I need to have a more
destabilizing color introduced in it.
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I’ve always taken from the retablos,
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but it’s more about a type of painting technique—
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a kind of decorative, applied arts technique
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by which they embellish the
surface of the retablos.
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And that I’ve been doing for over twenty years.
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But this was the first time I sampled so directly.
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I think it was because it was about figuration.
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Every morning, I have a walk about,
looking at all the cactuses that we’ve planted.
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Really studying them.
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This is the first time that instead of inventing
or fabricating a painting,
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that I’m actually referring to
something very specifically
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that I’ve been looking at every morning.
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What I think still has to happen
in a painting like this is that
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we’re seeing the setting and
we’re seeing a list of nouns.
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And there are a list of adjectives.
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So the nouns are all being modified.
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But, linguistically, what isn’t happening
in this painting is the verb yet.
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In all of the paintings—
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and especially in the ones that I showed
in New York at the end of last year—
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it really is a form of poltergeist or
animism that’s inhabiting the scene.
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The tableau.
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Clearly, something is occurring
in this area of the painting.
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Some sort of shift of identity of a space,
but we can’t name it.
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But, then, a way for me to
somewhat sublimate it back down
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and for it not to seem too spectacular,
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I’ve placed a spider web over it to somewhat...
like a net, to somehow corral the effect a bit.
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It’s a central part of the painting,
but again it’s still not enough
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for it to be the verb of the painting.
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And somehow I think the verb of the
painting has to occur somewhere in here,
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somehow to activate the branches of the cactus
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even at the expense of it being
a little bit more allegorical.
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That I wouldn’t mind.
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I’m not resisting the invasion of
that aspect of my private life,
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which is the garden really clearly
finding its place in the work.
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I don’t respond to the idea of nature at large.
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I prefer landscaping.
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And landscaping as a way to
push back a little bit the chaos of nature,
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of the kind of violence of it.
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So it’s imposing a type of
rational gardening structure
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over these cactus and succulents.
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We’re not as keen on a type of naturalism
so the garden has a very decided mannerism to it.
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The cactus are the surrogate structure.
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And the garden is one elaborate metaphor.
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One of the things that gardening
induces in the gardener,
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for good or for bad,
is a rumination on mortality.
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Because you have a concentrated and
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very compressed relationship to
the life and death of plants.
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You think about that a little bit more
than if you didn’t garden.
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It becomes a heightened
synopsized life and death cycle
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over and over and over again.