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[Tania Bruguera: "Immigrant Movement International"]
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[Queens, New York]
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[ALIZA NISENBAUM] It was really fun to paint here.
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[Aliza Nisenbaum, Artist]
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I was painting always when there was either
a Zumba class
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or a children's orchestra class.
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There would always be at least four or five
little kids around my palette,
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putting their fingers into the paint
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and asking me how to make particular colors
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and seeing the way I put the brush down on
the canvas.
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I'm a Mexican,
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and I've become a little bit more of a part
of the art world down there,
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and so this has been like a real home for
me.
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So, yeah, Vero and Marisa are here.
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--[NISENBAUM, IN SPANISH] How are you Vero?
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--It's been a long time since I saw you last!
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--[VERO, IN SPANISH] Yes, yes. I've missed
you too.
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--[NISENBAUM, IN SPANISH] Likewise.
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--Hi Marisa! How are you love?
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--[MARISA, IN SPANISH] Good.
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--[NISENBAUM, IN SPANISH] Are you both ready
for the party?
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--[VERO, IN SPANISH] Yes, yes. Very, very
ready.
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[NISENBAUM] I painted Vero twice.
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She was my first model
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and she is the most inspiring person that
I met in my class.
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[VERO, IN SPANISH] I feel very very proud
because
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imagine, I'm in a painting
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me, my husband, and my daughter!
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In my mind I thought that in one hour
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a painting was completed; but, no,
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it's a lot of hours of work.
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I met her here because I took her class
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of learning English through art.
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[NISENBAUM] We were talking a lot about ideas
of women--ideas of feminism.
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But, they really didn't use the word 'feminist'
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or it was a little bit shunned or something.
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So, we started opening up ideas of what that
would mean for different people.
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And so, the idea of sitting face to face,
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it's a very intimate experience having a model
and painting them.
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And so, that always makes people open up.
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You're painting every single part of their
flesh and their skin,
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and the flow and folds of their clothes,
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and so, that immediately is a kind of intimate
experience.
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[VERO, IN SPANISH] In Mexico, I studied an
Aztec dance.
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My family and I are accustomed to wearing
attire
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typical of our country.
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And the truth is that time I wore a blouse
with flowers,
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very pretty, with strong colors,
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and now I always see it, I have the painting
in my home
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in my living room.
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Before anything, I give thanks to Aliza.
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[NISENBAUM] A lot of these women are people
that hide, in some ways,
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from public view--
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from being seen--
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because a lot of them are undocumented immigrants.
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So I was trying to give a sense of agency
to the women that were here
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in terms of finding their voice, in terms
art,
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and in terms of, also, basic English skills.
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There's such a rich history of social painting
in Mexico.
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You know, going back all the way to the muralists,
and...
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I think so much more art now has become about
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this social space--social practice.
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[Tania Bruguera; Artist, IMI Initiator]
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It's very important for everyone to know about
the poetics of this space.
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[BRUGUERA] The people in Immigrant Movement,
they are using art to empower themselves.
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So, they have been part of contemporary art
as well,
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and they understand now, much better,
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how contemporary art works,
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and everything they can get out of it.
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People can also grow and understand how to
work from their fear--
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with the limitations they have put on themselves
once they enter this country.
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[ANA RAMIEREZ] Because we're in a city
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that sometimes is somewhat difficult.
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Once a while we all go through difficult moments
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in our lives, no?
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For me, being in a ceremony gives me
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the strength to go forward day to day.
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So being here, for me, fills me with strength--
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strength, happiness,
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lots of energy,
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and it gives me pleasure to work together
with my family
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of the Tletlpapalotzin group.
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[IMI Community Celebration Day]
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[BRUGUERA] Immigrant Movement is not a finished
product yet.
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All the time that we spend in Immigrant Movement,
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until now, is to prepare the conditions for
the project to happen.
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If you ask me who I am, I think I am an idealist
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because I am dying to start a political party,
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because this is what I really wanted to do--
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to create a political power for immigrants,
by immigrants.
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And I know, in the United States, the risk
of doing that
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is that it's going to be seen maybe as
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a gesture more than an actual thing that happens.
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But we'll see.