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Kara Walker: "A Subtlety, or the Marvelous
Sugar Baby"
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[WALKER] "Kara Walker's work deals with history..."
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[Domino Sugar Factory, Brooklyn, NY]
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Embedded in that statement,
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"Kara Walker is dealing with history,"
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is this kind of desire for
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a hero who can fix this problem
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of our history and racism.
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And I don't think that my work is actually
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effectively dealing with history.
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I think of my work as kind of
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subsumed by history [LAUGHS]
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or consumed by history.
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[MAN #1] Alright, what we want...
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we want to work from the back, forward.
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[MAN #2] Go the back...
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the layout...
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14, 24, 34, 44.
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[MAN #1] Okay.
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[WALKER] Nato Thompson from Creative Time,
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he said, "You have to see this."
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"This place is totally filled with molasses."
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Molasses on the walls,
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molasses on the rafters,
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globs of sugar fifty feet up in the air,
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just left over from this refining process.
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It was such a cathedral to industry,
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and such a cathedral to this one commodity.
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The whole project is predicated on
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this space being demolished
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at the end of the run of the show.
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I had to learn more about sugar
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in the process of trying to understand this
building.
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Sugar comes from sugar cane.
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Sugar cane is grown in tropical climates.
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Sugar cane is, and has been, harvested by
slaves,
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underpaid workers, and children possibly.
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It's a fascinating and very long history.
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I started putting down all of my free association
ideas,
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starting with sugar and molasses.
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And molasses is a by-product
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of the sugar processing.
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What other by-products are there?
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And I got to the end, and I was like,
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"Ruins!" You know?
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It was just like, "Ruins,"
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everything was just in ruins.
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And I couldn't just produce ruins.
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In this book I was reading
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about the history of sugar,
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contemporaries described something called
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a "sugar subtlety".
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I loved this term.
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A "subtlety" is a sugar sculpture
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made out of sugar paste,
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marzipan,
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fruits and nuts,
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that was sculpted to portray royalty,
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and only could be consumed by
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royalty, nobility, clergy.
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The subtlety presents this opportunity
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to make a figure that
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can embrace many themes
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that is representative of power
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in and of itself.
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[WALKER] Wow!
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I was sort of grasping at
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too many different ideas
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that I wanted to bring into the piece.
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[WOMAN] Like, what don't you want it to look
like?
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[WALKER] I don't know how to answer that.
[LAUGHS]
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I mean, I've never done anything like this
before [LAUGHS]
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So I don't really have, like,
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a really good opinion, you know?
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From ruins to the sugar subtlety
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lead me to think about the...
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you know, what sort of figure,
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and what sort of position would she occupy.
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I think there was a moment of stepping back
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and...ding! You know?
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"Oh, what about a sphinx?"
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You know, it was very subtle, actually. [LAUGHS]
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It's not a kind of
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Egyptophile relic.
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This is someone from the new world.
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I was not at all secure about doing sculpture.
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This was one of those things that was
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so out of my league that I hung back
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during the sculpting process.
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[MICHAEL FERRARI-FONTANA] We started with
a clay model.
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The model was scanned and digitized
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and created into a file that could be read
by carving robots.
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It's simply one layer that goes on top of the other.
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You always hear about sculptors
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[Michael Ferrari-Fontana, Sculptor]
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liberating the figure from the block.
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We go back in with the bow wires
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and basically drag the bow wire across the
blocks at angles
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in order to achieve the curvatures that we're
looking for.
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No matter how incredible robotic carving is
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the hand is an element that you can't get
away from.
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And it's beyond the hand.
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It's not just the hand--
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it's what's driving the hand.
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[ERIC HAGAN] We're in the process of doing
our first test,
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so we're still very much in the discovery
phase.
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I've done a lot of smaller tests--
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some twelve-inch figures--
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[Eric Hagan, Sugar Artist]
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but nothing five-feet tall.
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So it's a mixture of
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corn syrup, sugar, and water.
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Kind of like what you would use to make
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caramel, or lollipops.
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So we're boiling it up to between
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265 and 290 degrees Fahrenheit.
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We're pouring them into a rubber mold
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to let them set.
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So when we de-mold them,
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they will be covered in the sugar and water
mixture
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similar to the sphinx.
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[WALKER] I highly recommend a fifty-pound
bag of sugar
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for personal therapy.
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But if you mix it with
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a couple of gallons of water...
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it's very fun.
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I mean, it's the most fun I've had since kindergarten,
I think,
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making art.
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I think it was very important to me to have
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figures made out of a substance that is so
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temporal--
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it's so subject to change.
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I really recognize what a privilege it is
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to be working in that space,
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because I can think of
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a thousand other artists who could take on
the challenge
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of that space.
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I really love the fact
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of these figures kind of melting and dripping.
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And they're very much like the interior of
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the Domino Sugar Factory
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which is also still dripping,
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still producing molasses from its interior,
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still sort of weeping this substance.
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The mammy,
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although she's bent over in this gesture of,
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sort of, supplication,
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I don't feel like she's there to be taken,
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or satisfied,
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or abused in any way.
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She's sort of withholding.
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I don't want to make her into
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a non-sexual caretaker of the city.
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She's powerful because she is so
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kind of iconic in a way.
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And she is so monumental and so unexpected.
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If I've done the job well,
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then she gains her power
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by upsetting expectations one after the other.
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I think it's very important to look back.
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I don't think we do it often enough.
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I think sometimes looking back leads to, kind
of,
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depression and stasis,
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which isn't good.
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But, looking forward without any kind of
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deep, historical feeling of connectedness--
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it's no good either.