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Turning Ordinary Actions into Art with Bruce Nauman | Art21

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    <v ->I don't generally think 
    about large audiences.
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    I think about, who would I like to show this to?
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    Who would I, that came over to visit,
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    would I say, "Let me show you this"?
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    (sculpture grinds)
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    If it meets that,
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    then I figure a lot of people can look at it.
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    Okay, okay, okay, okay.
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    Okay, okay, okay, okay.
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    Okay, okay, okay.
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    All right, okay, okay, okay.
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    Okay, okay, okay, okay, okay.
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    Okay, okay, okay.
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    All right, okay, okay, okay,
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    okay, okay, okay, okay.
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    Okay, okay, okay, okay, okay.
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    Okay, okay, okay, okay.
    (humming)
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    (humming and trilling)
    (camcorder beeps)
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    Last winter we had a lot of mice in the studio.
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    And I got rid of most of them.
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    Then I was sitting around here,
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    not having a very good project.
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    So I set up this infrared camera at night
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    in different places, and see what happens.
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    And I'm getting, oh, usually 
    three or four different events,
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    (Bruce chuckles)
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    things happening with the mice,
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    a mouse or two coming through, and the cat.
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    And so far they've never 
    happened at the same time.
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    And then every morning when I come in here
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    and replay what's been captured,
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    it's like a little meditation,
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    because you can't really watch 
    any one part of the screen
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    or you'll miss something 
    that happens in another part,
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    because it happens pretty 
    fast and it's real short.
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    So you have to kind of not watch anything
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    so that you can be aware of everything.
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    (footsteps)
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    This is...
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    oh, a project I said I'd get involved in
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    probably almost a year and a half or two years ago
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    for the Wisconsin sesquicentennial.
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    And it's a portfolio of prints
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    by artists either from Wisconsin
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    or we've had some lived in Wisconsin
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    or something to do with Wisconsin.
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    And I lived in Wisconsin quite a bit of my life.
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    I think I'm about finished with it.
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    I just wrote "Wisconsin sesquicentennial project"
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    on these three plates.
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    I didn't start trying to be an artist
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    until I was a couple of years into college.
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    And I've never understood 
    why I decided at that point
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    that I could, but I did,
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    because I was doing very well at the other stuff.
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    Or I recognized that I didn't 
    have the passion about it,
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    mathematics and physics,
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    that friends of mine had that 
    were doing the same stuff.
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    And I saw that in art.
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    And for whatever reason I switched.
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    I needed a different way to approach
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    the idea of being an artist.
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    (engine starts)
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    This runs an hour.
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    And that's how long it took 
    to do what I was doing.
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    And I wasn't sure, when I 
    finished it, if anybody would
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    take it seriously as a work of art,
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    and I don't know how many 
    people do, anyway. (chuckles)
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    It turned out to be kind of interesting to watch
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    and watch more than once.
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    In the studio I don't do a lot of work
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    that requires repetitive activity.
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    I spend a lot of time looking and thinking
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    and then trying to find the most efficient way
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    to get what I want,
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    whether it's drawing or sculpture
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    or casting plaster or whatever.
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    But part of the enjoyment I take in it
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    is finding the most efficient way to do it.
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    (post thuds)
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    (onlooker laughs)
    (Bruce mumbles)
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    <v Onlooker>Huh?</v>
    Scared me.
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    <v Onlooker>Sorry.</v>
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    Good job!
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    <v ->And I don't have any 
    specific step to take,
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    because I don't start the same way every time.
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    There is knowing when it's enough
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    and you can leave it alone.
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    And a lot of it's accidental, 
    the result of cheap equipment.
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    (Bruce laughs)
    Accidents.
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    The accidents kind of keep 
    it real too, and I like that.
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    But it's what keeps me in the studio,
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    always being surprised.
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    So there's some joy in there too. (laughs)
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    When it all kind of works, and you say, "Ah."
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    Makes it okay.
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    (rope whacks)
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    (horse hooves clopping)
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    When I got involved with the horses,
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    and I was in my 40s or 
    something before that happened,
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    and so I had to learn a lot
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    from people that had been 
    doing it all their lives,
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    and so sometimes it's hard to communicate.
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    It's been interesting for me
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    to work with these cowboys and 
    ranchers and be around them.
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    And they're hard jobs that 
    they do, physically hard jobs.
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    Good guys, take a lot of pride in their work,
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    and they like to do it efficiently and cleanly.
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    It's not different from the way
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    I like to work in the studio.
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    Even though the studio looks like a big mess,
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    I like my mind to at least try 
    and be (chuckles) efficient.
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    I really would have a hard time being here
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    without that part of my life, just being out here
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    and having kind of a real good reason to be here.
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    It's hard to not let it take up too much time,
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    because it sure could.
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    But the other part of me that's an artist
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    is not gonna be satisfied 
    with the ranching either.
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    Some things flow from one to the other,
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    and some can't or don't.
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    This...
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    In the last few years I've been 
    working on several projects,
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    or a couple of projects,
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    well, several that involve the idea of stairs
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    or bleachers and stadiums.
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    I was thinking about having a bunch of bleachers
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    that went up and down, you could walk up and down,
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    and then inverting them and 
    hanging them from the ceiling.
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    It's sort of like subverting the function.
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    I always thought that the idea
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    that you can make something 
    that appears to be functional,
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    but when you try and use it,
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    you can't quite figure out 
    what its function might be.
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    And that's, in the end, what its function is,
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    is for you to figure out 
    what to do with it, I guess.
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    In fact, they seem to be using it that way,
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    eating lunch and just sitting out in the sun.
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    (footfalls)
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    There is no regular rhythm to going up and down.
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    You have to take each step and watch it,
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    and so it requires you to 
    pay quite a lot of attention.
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    I'm not even sure if you need to walk on it.
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    But, of course everybody does.
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    It's the intention that changes it from a stairway
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    to a stairway as a work of art. (chuckles)
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    Because I said so. (chuckles)
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    I studied mathematics for a while,
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    and one of the things that I always liked about it
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    is that there were things you could prove,
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    but they were just things you proved,
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    they didn't change the 
    structure of mathematics any.
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    There were things that people have done and proved
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    that changed the structure of mathematics,
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    but it had to be really clear,
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    and sometimes it was very elegant.
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    Having to say it out loud,
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    having to explain what you're 
    doing, forces you to be clear.
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    You can't kind of just fumble through
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    and get something and say,
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    "Well, that's what I meant to do all along."
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    That is the part that I think about in my work;
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    making sure that what I'm doing is really clear.
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    And then it's available.
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    And those are the kinds of 
    things that you look for.
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    You look in art, and this changes the structure
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    of how you can think about 
    art, and it's there for you.
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    And those are wonderful things
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    when you're in their presence.
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    So that's what we are looking for.
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    Thank you, thank you, thank 
    you, thank you, thank you,
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    thank you, thank you, thank 
    you, thank you, thank you,
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    thank you, thank you, thank 
    you, thank you, thank you,
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    thank you, thank you, thank you!
Title:
Turning Ordinary Actions into Art with Bruce Nauman | Art21
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"Art in the Twenty-First Century" broadcast series
Duration:
14:05

English (United States) subtitles

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