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JOAN JONAS: In the mirror pieces the main
idea is the visual of the mirrors in the space
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and how they’re reflecting and how they look.
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Is this a space because there’s nobody there?
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WOMAN #1: Yeah…(INAUD)
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JOAN JONAS: Oh, ok…
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The movement is very simple, you don’t have
to be a skilled performer, but you have to
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be somewhat at ease.
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We should establish a space that you should move in.
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I draw from many sources.
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Literature.
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Film.
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Myth.
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When I decided to switch to performance it
was in the ‘60s and I had never done any
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performing or theater work ever.
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So I did workshops with Trisha Brown, Yvonne
Rainer, Steve Paxton.
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Maybe just one or two classes with some of
them, to learn now to move and to be in public.
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At the same time I was making my own performances.
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Do you dance back there in the back row?
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Yeah, behind the back row.
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All right.
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So just walk through that.
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Okay.
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This is a rehearsal for a piece called Mirror
Piece I which I did originally in 1969.
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You’re in these rows.
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On the floor.
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You slowly rise and move to the first position
for the improv.
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That’s the key.
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Always keep the mirrors facing the audience,
remember that.
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I was inspired by Borges for this first piece,
reading his Labyrinths.
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The original impetus was to take all the quotes
about mirrors and I memorized them and perform them.
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The mirror was a perfect vehicle to begin with.
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I liked the way the audience is uneasy seeing
themselves in the mirror.
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They’re not just reflecting the audience,
the mirrors are reflecting the space
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and the other performers.
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So I like the dimensionality of this.
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All my work, from the beginning, involved
dealing with a space.
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The whole piece is planned as far as the movements.
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How does it end?
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That’s planned ahead of time.
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It evolves.
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A lot of my work is intuitive.
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A very long time ago in the ‘60s, just as
I was going through the transition from sculpture
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to performance I went to the southwest because
I was doing research about other cultures
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and rituals.
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I saw the Hopi Snake Dance.
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They wear masks.
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It not only transforms the body but they become
something else.
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Masks made me feel more at ease and gave me
the chance to create a kind of alter ego.
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I went to Japan.
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I went to the Noh theater a lot and was very
influenced by that.
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Organic Honey, when I started doing that project,
in the early ‘70s,
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I started drawing for the camera.
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Performance gives me ideas for drawings.
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This is the beginning of my collection of
screen masks.
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I like that double vision of seeing the face
through the mask.
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When I was constructing the character of Organic
Honey, I went to an erotic store and bought
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a mask like this.
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It transforms your body movements.
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It means that I can move in a different way
and really feel very differently about my
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body and myself.
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I made this mask one summer and this mask
another summer.
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So these I use in Reanimation.
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I was working with landscape and the idea
of what’s happening with the animals in
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the landscape and also the spirit of the landscape.
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And so I put on a mask and I become that spirit in a way.
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And then Jason’s music inspires me to move
in a certain way.
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And that’s part of our working together.
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JASON MORAN: I wasn’t prepared for how rigorous
the process is.
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And Joan really toils over this material through
the text, through the images, through her
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movements, through the wardrobe, through the
sounds that she’s going to make.
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There’s a lot kind of going around in her
mind to make these pieces.
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And you know I just am trying to show up and
play some piano.
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Through that summer we spent, I don’t know
however many.....
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JOAN JONAS: Six weeks.
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JASON MORAN: Six weeks.
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JOAN JONAS: Every day.
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JASON MORAN: Every day, you know nine to five,
you know sitting at....
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I sat at the piano.....
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JOAN JONAS: He sat at the piano, we played
like for seven hours a day.
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Now I loved it, I mean for me to have live
music is very inspiring, it gives me energy.
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And Jason was younger then, so.
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So he could do it, but he told me that he
never played the piano so much in his life.
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Right?
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JASON MORAN: Yeah.
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In one sitting.
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JOAN JONAS: In one sitting.
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JASON MORAN: Because, because playing in an
old factory parking lot at the bottom of Dia:Beacon.
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The sound is carrying everywhere.
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And I hadn’t played in spaces like that.
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I was just trying to make sounds that could
resonate in that space in a way that would
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make sense.
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And so when I would fall upon something, Joan
would say, well I like, I like that.
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For the last piece, Reanimation, I had like
a shard of an idea,
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but it wouldn’t make sense until we actually got together.
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I just pulled a book off of the shelf, you know.
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It may have been like Schubert or something
and then played it backwards.
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And I was like, this is so perfect.
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And so now I have a new like catalog of music
that’s all, you know, well this is Joan
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Jonas’s song.
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You know like songs I wrote for Joan.
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JOAN JONAS: I work back and forth between
performance and installation and
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autonomous ideo work.
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And each feeds into the other.
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I get ideas from the performance that I put
into the video and then ideas when I’m making
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the video that I put back into the performances.
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And then all of that is part of the installation.
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“It is often said of people with second
sight that their soul leaves the body.
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That doesn’t happen to the glacier.
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But the next time one looks at it, the body
has left the glacier and nothing remains except
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the soul clad in air.
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Wasn’t the ferry ram actually the glacier?”
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I think of different ways that I can bring
drawing or image-making into the actual performance.
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Well I put a little bit of ink on the page
and then put ice cubes in the ink to make
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these different configurations.
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So it comes out differently each time, I never
know exactly how.
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Reanimation is based on a text by an Icelandic
author, Halldor Laxness.
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It’s about a glacier.
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So the subject is snow and ice and nature.
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I should just go on the edge.
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Let me, there’s a picture of it here.
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I did this once before and I don’t want
to decide again.
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Just do it the same way I did it.
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Installation means an arrangement of objects
and projections.
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I drew animal heads when I went to Norway
to shoot the landscape for Reanimation.
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Animal heads in the snow, that are based on
my dog drawings.
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I can do it very spontaneously.
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There was a aquarium where I went to shoot
the Norwegian landscape.
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And it had fish from the local waters.
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I wanted to deal with the watery world because
the glaciers are melting.
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The year before, I’d found this book of
Japanese fish.
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I had this idea, I have to make a hundred
ink drawings.
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Lately I’ve been making these drawings using
this Rorschach method.
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You put ink on one side of the page and then
you fold the paper over.
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I very deliberately make a configuration that
is going to be like an insect of some sort.
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I’m aware of what could be read into things.
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I don’t like to talk about the symbolism,
it puts too much meaning into it.
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I like it to be what it is in a very concrete way.
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MAN #1: We all know the story of Helen of Troy.
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JOAN JONAS: Lines in the Sand is from a poem
about Helen going to Egypt and not to Troy.
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So instead of going to Egypt, I actually went
to Las Vegas, as a kind of representation
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of American sensibility and commercialism.
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We found these abandoned recreations of Egyptian statues.
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I had photographs of my grandmother’s trip
to Egypt at the beginning of the 20th Century
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and that represented the real Egypt.
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Two Egypts, the real Egypt and Las Vegas,
because I wanted to refer to colonialism in
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relation to our involvement with Egypt.
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I had a costume and some things.
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And then here we are inside Luxor.
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JOAN JONAS: ...the reason that brought us here.
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Was the fall of Troy the reason?
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Can one wave a thousand ships against one
kiss in the night?
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WOMAN #1: It was a trade war.
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JOAN JONAS: Another video was me drawing on
the blackboard.
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Again, I drew with a stick.
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That was a way to extend my body onto the
surface of the blackboard.
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I really am interested in the whole idea of
erasure, drawing and erasing.
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And I drew and erased over and over again
the Sphinx and the pyramid, obsessed with
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one image.
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I also drew it live in the performance.
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And then the couple in bed based on an Irish
8th Century epic, The Táin.
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It’s a king and a queen arguing about who
has more possessions.
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WOMAN #1: It still remains, oh husband of
mine, that my fortune is greater than yours.
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JOAN JONAS: I like humor also.
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It’s kind of humorous, but serious at the
same time.
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Lines In The Sand has to do with how they
made boundaries in the Middle East.
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When you draw a line in the sand, you dare
somebody to walk over it, but you also make
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the boundary between countries.
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The shape, the scent.
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The feel of things.
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The actuality of the present.
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A lot of the pieces
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–Its bearing on the past.
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are based on text..
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–Their bearing on the future.
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from centuries ago.
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–Past.
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But I want to bring them into the present.
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–Present.
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They’re poetic.
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–Future.
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But political.