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Jamian Juliano-Villani's Painting Compulsion | ART21 "New York Close Up"

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    [REGGAE MUSIC PLAYS]
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    I think I like reggae because it's like listening
    to a party.
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    It's like almost company, in a sense.
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    [Jamian Juliano-Villani, artist]
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    It's music that's actually made from necessity.
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    They built their own soundsystems,
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    their own speakers,
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    their own recording devices,
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    and, like, they just used the shit that they
    had.
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    ["New York Close Up"]
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    Well, that's kind of what I do, too.
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    Like, I make my paintings out of necessity
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    and like using the things around me to communicate
    what I need to,
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    because I'm really bad at articulating how
    I feel,
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    vocally.
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    The paintings do that for me.
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    ["Jamian Juliano-Villani's Painting Compulsion"]
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    [CLICKING SOUNDS FROM CAMERA PHONE SHUTTER]
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    I just like this book because
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    it's like really basic ways to compare things.
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    When I look at something, I just take notes
    of ideas.
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    Green. Suede. Fleece.
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    Tower of Babel.
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    Microscopic life.
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    Hummingbird. Hand and egg. Daddy long legs.
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    Daddy super long legs.
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    And you know that daddy long legs are the
    most poisonous spider in the world?
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    Except that they don't have teeth.
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    So if they had teeth, you would be dead.
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    For the one I'm doing now with the feet,
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    those are Bruce Nauman feet.
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    I want the feet to somehow look scared,
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    if I could figure that out.
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    So maybe a daddy long legs would do it.
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    Ever since I was little, I just kind of have
    this registry of facts in my brain.
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    In high school, I used to keep scrap books
    of all the things that I liked.
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    I would just cut them out and put them in
    there and save them.
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    And I think that these are the kinds of things
    that made me feel comfortable.
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    And it seemed so natural, when I started painting,
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    to kind of do the same thing.
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    When I'm working, I have probably, like, thirty
    images that,
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    in a month or two months, I'll keep on coming back to.
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    I really will try to make those work with
    what I'm doing.
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    But, they never look like they're supposed
    to be together.
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    That's when shit gets good.
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    That's when the painting can change from "an
    image-based narrative" into something else.
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    So, it could get dark or surreal
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    or funny or fucked up--
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    it's like I'm trying to deliver a baby, you
    know?
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    And the baby is, like, really...
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    has like eight arms and is really fucked up
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    and, like, I don't know how to deliver a baby,
    you know?
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    I'm trying to figure out what kind of person
    this is going to be.
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    Because I don't think it should be as simple
    as a human face,
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    and I also don't know if it should just be
    an animal, either.
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    But, right now, I'm kind of just scrolling
    through a bunch of images.
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    I'm just going to plop around and see what
    feels right.
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    No.
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    Too dumb.
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    So this is Shen Koo. I really like his work.
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    He's like this, kind of, crazy apocalyptic
    illustrator.
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    The reason why I use cartoons a lot of the
    times
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    is because I like that they're a kind of populist
    way of communicating.
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    Because painting is not populist at all, you
    know?
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    --I kind of like that idea.
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    I respond to things immediately
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    in like an emotional, guttural way,
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    and that's how decisions are formed.
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    It's like when something pisses you off.
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    Something stresses you out.
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    Or, you like the color of something.
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    You're like, "I like that sweater,"
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    "Fuck it, I want that sweater."
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    You know? It's like...
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    [SNAPS FINGERS] Like that.
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    [SOUND OF A CAR SCREECHING TO A HALT AND THEN CRASHING]
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    I feel much better about doing the paintings
    I do by using other references
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    so it's not so insular--
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    it's not so personal.
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    They're also helping me figure out
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    the things that I can't communicate yet to
    myself.
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    The one painting I did with the wavy fox in
    that cage,
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    that's fucking me, you know!?
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    That's how I felt.
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    I didn't realize it then.
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    I think they're all extensions of me
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    or self-portraits in some way--
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    or at least an attitude that I have.
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    Those are things you can't necessarily put
    into words.
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    And, like, having a really rough childhood...
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    And, I also have a twin,
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    so it was really hard for me to talk to other
    people.
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    I would just talk to my twin, and that would
    be it, you know?
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    And, like, I didn't need any friends.
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    And I didn't really have any friends growing
    up, you know?
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    Like, maybe two?
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    One of them was my sibling.
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    Uh, doesn't really count.
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    I think because of that, I have a hard time
    communicating with people,
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    or, like, connecting with people.
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    Having to, like, basically just rely on myself.
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    It's like, if I don't take care of myself,
    no one else will.
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    I have this obsessive relationship with my
    work and the way I work
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    because it's kind of like my friend.
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    It's like the thing that validates me--makes
    me feel good.
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    I care about it and they care about me.
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    It's why I put the things that I collect--and
    really, really love--
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    in my paintings, you know?
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    Like, they're almost company, in a sense.
Title:
Jamian Juliano-Villani's Painting Compulsion | ART21 "New York Close Up"
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"New York Close Up" series
Duration:
06:02

English subtitles

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