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Nancy Spero in "Protest" - Season 4 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21

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    NANCY SPERO: Even though I have over 500 
    images in my art at this point to choose from,
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    nevertheless I have what you call “stars.”
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    Like stars in Hollywood, they’re appearing 
    and reappearing in different roles.
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    Certainly the ancient Egyptians, 
    the musicians, are stars.
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    And I had made a design with many 
    of these ancient Egyptian images
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    for this subway station here in New York City.
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    See a continuum, see a procession.
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    Now this procession is kind 
    of formalized and dance-like.
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    Let’s say it could be for an opera.
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    After all, this is Lincoln Center.
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    I’d like to think that I have all 
    layers of conceptual in the art,
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    that it...it’s easily read.
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    But on the other hand, I do 
    hope that it’s more complicated
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    and that it’s not just one 
    easy read and then that’s it.
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    See I have too much stuff.
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    This is from about....
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    This is a lot of years and 
    many different people printing.
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    I guess maybe my art can be said to be a protest.
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    I don’t know if it’s railing against the 
    world or something, but I am protesting.
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    And as an artist, I…
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    I am privileged to create in things 
    the way I think that they should be,
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    you know because that gets 
    out my message to the world.
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    See I’m interested in messages.
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    And if people want to take something 
    from it, I am thrilled of course.
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    The War Paintings are certainly a protest 
    because it was done with indignation.
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    The U.S. had gotten involved in Vietnam 
    and I remember during that time,
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    reading newspapers and I remember this 
    terrible image of like this woman running from,
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    you know from her house that had 
    been set afire by helicopters.
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    I thought of the victims in Vietnam
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    and what they would think of these war machines.
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    And that was working on me and then 
    I started painting the War series.
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    But I felt then that the symbol of 
    the Vietnam War was the helicopter
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    and that became my primary subject matter.
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    I think the political came by having 
    a partnership with Leon Golub.
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    My husband, my partner really of over 
    51 years, he’s recently deceased.
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    Leon always had some sort of 
    foot in the political in his art,
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    whether it was overt or not.
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    And I think that that aspect of 
    his thinking influenced me a lot.
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    This back and forth of ideas and discussions,
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    I think that Leon’s painting is incredibly ugly,
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    which makes it incredibly beautiful.
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    But the main thing is the 
    power and the action in it.
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    It was pretty damned difficult 
    contending with someone who was so,
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    not only did he do big 
    paintings and fantastic ones,
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    but you know what, he...he was really 
    brilliant and that’s pretty hard.
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    I had a really hard time 
    contending with such a person.
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    But I decided I, I just had to do my thing
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    and so I started doing very small work.
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    Very small work.
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    Figures that are sometimes 
    an inch tall or even less.
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    Almost microscopic. And so 
    in a way that’s a retort.
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    And also it’s a retort to the large works 
    of the mostly male New York artists.
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    Leon of course always in my mind was an exception.
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    How totally sympathetic he was to my art.
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    Over the years the work has evolved 
    from a more traditional format
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    of either the rectangle or the square 
    or whatever in front of one’s eyes.
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    And if we move our eyes, it would be 
    eventually nothing there but blank wall.
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    And so I have let it continue.
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    This is in Malmö, Sweden that I 
    showed it, THE BLACK AND THE RED.
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    This was an enormous room.
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    In seeing this huge, huge gallery, I just 
    kind of took a deep breath and I put…
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    I put the paper piece around in a single band.
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    I continued along printing on 
    the wall like a trompe l’oeil
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    to reiterate the images in the printed piece.
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    And when the show was over, I could 
    pick up and take THE BLACK AND THE RED,
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    that which was on paper, but I 
    couldn’t take THE BLACK AND THE RED,
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    that had been printed on the wall.
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    It’s like theater, when the 
    play is over, it’s finished,
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    it only stays in the memory of 
    those who saw it and remember it.
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    SPERO: So we’ll have a few 
    on the ground, yeah. Wow.
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    SAM KUNTZ: ...(OVERLAP) have 
    them on the ground or not?
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    SPERO: No, no I thought we’d...maybe 
    just a couple on the ground you know.
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    Yeah.
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    Ooh, that’s good.
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    Ooh, ooh, that’s really white.
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    Oops, oops, oops.
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    Yeah, yeah.
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    SPERO: I was invited to be in the Venice Biennale.
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    I thought, what in the devil am I going to do?
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    And I was thinking about one of the 
    paintings I had done in the War series.
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    And in that I had done a maypole 
    with bloody severed heads
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    hanging from gaily colored 
    ribbons from the maypole.
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    And finally I thought to literally make a maypole.
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    So I just started working on the maypole with 
    the help of Sam Kuntz and Marybeth Craig.
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    Marybeth’s in printing the images
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    and so Sam has been working her part of 
    the magic in transforming these heads.
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    SAM: Nancy has such a facility to 
    render an expressive, pained figure.
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    And what’s amazing to me is that 
    if you look at these carefully,
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    they’re very small and the line 
    has been drawn very quickly.
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    And this expression is articulated perfectly.
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    I mean and...and they’re 
    all different. It’s not....
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    I mean it’s, it’s a kind of freedom that she has.
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    SAM: Some of these might even have 
    been done as part of the War series
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    which would be 1966 through ’68.
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    She saved some of these heads that were 
    never incorporated into any of the pieces.
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    And so now we’re blowing them up 
    to make printing plates of polymers
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    so that we can print a back 
    on aluminum on a large scale
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    and make these disembodied heads.
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    SPERO: But I feel that the images I 
    did long ago which I can’t recoup.
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    You know I mean I cannot 
    re-draw them, in the same way.
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    I’m on another ...I’m on 
    another direction altogether.
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    But I thought that I couldn’t cannibalize 
    what I have done forty years ago.
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    I have the idea of printing on 
    the metal and then cutting it out.
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    So I’ve envisioned it then that it 
    would be on this metal and that maybe,
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    I don’t know how we’re going to do this,
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    but have a few kind of together.
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    And so if they banged up against 
    each other it would clank.
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    If one goes into jail for instance and hearing the 
    clank of the door and there you are, you’re....
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    I mean it even leaves me breathless now,
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    thinking about that, the sound of it.
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    And there you are.
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    I mean, there one is in this jail you know
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    and one can’t get out until that 
    guy with the keys or whatever left…
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    lets you out.
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    And, and, and so it is all of these 
    things running through my mind
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    and what it means to be metal and severed heads.
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    And so it kind of got a feeling of…
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    of the resemblances of all this brutality.
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    Just trying to show the insanity, 
    really the insanity of war.
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    I actually have cannibalized my own 
    work to kind of liberate myself from
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    what I have done and what I 
    really want to do in the future.
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    For Spain I had this idea of the repetition 
    of that image that I so blatantly liberated,
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    I saved from the ancient 
    Egyptian, uh, Mourning Women.
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    Then I thought that somehow to emphasize this…
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    this kind of prayerful, looking up as if 
    looking up to heaven or god knows what,
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    I decided that it should be on the 
    ground, like a real funeral procession.
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    In the gallery in New York I 
    retitled and kind of redid it again,
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    but entitled it Cri du Coeur.
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    It was the first piece after Leon died.
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    Like a “cry of the heart,” but to me it must 
    mean something kind of like intense emotion,
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    almost like praying, a cri du coeur you know,
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    plea-ing you know with heaven or…
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    or something like that I think by the gestures.
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    It’s almost...it’s always so strange,
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    it’s so empty and then you just put one…
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    these stupid little things in and…
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    and it’s too much then. This is good.
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    Maybe over near.....
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    Why do I do art?
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    What isn’t a reason for doing art?
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    I don’t know, it does need something.
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    That’s why it’s not finished, 
    because I can’t think you know what…
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    what to do.
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    SAM: Maybe it needs something 
    to throw it off balance.
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    SPERO: Mm-hmm, Mm-hmm.
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    SAM: Something awkward.
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    SPERO: Mm-hmm, Mm-hmm. I think I have 
    to think about it in another time.
Title:
Nancy Spero in "Protest" - 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:
13:44

English (United States) subtitles

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