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["New York Close Up"]
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I grew up surrounded by the ocean.
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It's a place to let your thoughts
wash over you,
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almost like daydream or sleep,
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where anything is possible.
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["Caroline Woolard's Floating Possibility"]
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I think what it means to be an artist
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is to be voraciously curious
about the world around you.
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And I cling to every fact and image
that compels me.
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During my research process I became obsessed
with this historic vessel.
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The amphora is a two-handled vessel with a
pointy bottom
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that looks like a turnip or a carrot,
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and it was used by conquered people
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to ship goods like olive oil or wine
to ancient Rome.
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I also found that the "at" symbol that we
use in email every single day
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is a mark for an amphora.
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And I would never have thought that every
time I press the "at" symbol
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I'm conjuring an imperial form.
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A transformation from the amphora
to the "at" symbol
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relates to a lot of my interest in economy
and exchange.
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For me it felt like a clear direction
to go in.
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[WOOLARD]
--Hello.
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[HELEN LEE]
--Hey!
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[WOOLARD]
--Okay so what have you been working on?
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[LEE]
--I have some murrines.
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[WOOLARD] I knew that
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it would be impossible for me
to pursue this project alone.
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[LEE]
--I'll show you the "at."
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[WOOLARD]
--Oh it's so hard to see!
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[LAUGHING]
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[LEE]
--There you go.
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[WOOLARD] The "at" symbol is so much
about digital communication,
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which often occurs through a glass interface,
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so I wanted to work with master glassblowers.
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[UrbanGlass, Brooklyn]
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I fell in love with glass because it's
automatically collaborative.
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[Alexander Rosenberg, artist]
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The way glassblowers are trained,
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you have to work in a group of
two or three or four,
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and at best,
glassblowers flow together in a
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non-verbal choreography
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to produce things that would be impossible
if they were working alone.
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[Helen Lee, artist]
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So we went into the material exploration itself,
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which was always informed by the research,
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but also leave space for the material to
speak on its own.
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We tried making many different amphorae.
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We made a custom blow mold
of the ancient form.
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We tried making hourglasses
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to think about the word "amphorae"
which means "carried on both sides."
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The amphorae were not made for display.
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They were made to be taken off of ships
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and to find their ground in the sand.
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In order to imagine the amphorae at sea,
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as they're often found,
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we decided to go to the beach.
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[Rockaway, Queens]
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--Babies, a lot of babies.
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At the beach, we had to learn
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how these objects, with their pointy bases,
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would find stability.
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We tried filling them with sand.
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We tried filling them with water.
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We tried looking at them floating in the water.
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And what we found was that
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they have an incredible capacity
to almost levitate.
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I love objects that have an
uneasy relationship to gravity
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and this inability to reconcile a concrete
and hardened world.
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We know that, for this project,
we'll be at a traditional gallery space.
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Another will be in a performance lecture.
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Another will be online as a project site.
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We're in the state of the project where
we continue to experiment--
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where we continue to
say "yes" to one another's whims.
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I want to move into a space
of speculative fiction
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to allow myself to imagine, as a visual artist,
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what could be.
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What if the amphora could unroll
and becomes a wave or a line?
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What if the imperative to communicate
that we have right now,
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is, in the future, an imperative to rest?
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What would it mean to suspend disbelief
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and make a work of art that's
for a dream state?
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What if art could be a kind of
glistening glass object
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in the middle of the ocean?