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Tabaimo in "Boundaries" - Season 6 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21

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    [ TABAIMO ]
    The Japanese pavilion
    has a hole in the ceiling
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    and a hole in the floor.
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    Rain falls through the roof.
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    The concept is that
    with the rain falling through,
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    the building becomes one
    with nature.
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    I decided to use the entire
    building as part of my work.
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    [sustained tone]
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    [eerie melody]
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    ♪ ♪
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    There is a Chinese saying:
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    "A frog in a well
    does not know the big ocean."
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    In Japan, we like to say,
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    "A frog in the well
    doesn't know the big ocean.
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    However, he knows
    the height of the sky."
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    [deep orchestral tones]
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    I put myself in the shoes
    of this frog.
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    That's how I conceived
    and developed my images.
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    ♪ ♪
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    I like to make music
    more than listen to it.
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    I know what kinds of sounds
    the work needs,
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    and I can make them myself.
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    [rumbling sounds]
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    "Japanese Kitchen" was my first
    video installation.
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    I created it
    for my graduation project.
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    In order to get my first job
    in the design field,
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    I put all my technique
    and knowledge into this work.
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    [knife chopping]
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    [faucet squeaks]
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    [water running]
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    Salary man, housewife,
    or high school student:
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    they're all stereotypical
    characters.
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    I don't need to explain them,
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    so I can focus on content
    rather than character.
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    [voice chanting]
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    [sizzling]
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    [sizzling]
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    [motor humming]
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    My inspiration is the situation
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    of the housewife doing cooking
    and listening to the tv,
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    A kind of talk show type
    of news reporting.
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    You might hear something painful
    or horrible,
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    one after another,
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    but ten seconds after you hear
    that horrible, painful story,
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    you've already forgotten it.
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    The most important thing
    is preparing the dinner.
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    [voice chanting]
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    [knife chopping]
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    [chanting continues]
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    Some people may find it painful.
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    some may find it funny.
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    [water runs]
    [knob squeaking]
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    When I'm making my work, I take
    50% of the responsibility.
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    The other half
    of the responsibility
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    is on the viewer...
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    [gunshot]
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    Then the work is complete.
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    Drawing is very important.
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    Without drawing,
    my ideas can't percolate.
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    I make line drawings on paper,
    and then I scan them
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    and fill in the lines
    on the computer.
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    I take all the different things
    I have colored in
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    and combine them on a screen
    to create a single image.
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    Then I put the images
    on a timeline, cel by cel,
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    creating the animation.
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    [distorted electronic music]
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    ♪ ♪
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    "Guignorama" is a visualization of the sensation I get
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    from the atopic dermatitis in my hands.
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    When my hands itch,
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    it feels like there's
    an insect or something
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    crawling under my skin.
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    [speaking Japanese]
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    I wanted the drawings
    to convey
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    the sensation of something
    living inside my hands,
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    even though they seem normal
    on the surface.
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    The word "Guignorama"
    is my combination
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    of the French word guignol,
    meaning "Puppet,"
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    and the English word "Panorama."
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    This combination conveys
    a sense of installation.
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    I really like inventing words.
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    [water glugging]
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    [motor humming]
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    [mechanical clanking]
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    [distorted electronic music]
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    [both laugh]
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    [speaking Japanese]
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    - My generation seems to stand
    on unstable ground,
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    and this is reflected in my work
    in various, different ways.
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    [camera shutter clicking]
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    [speaking Japanese]
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    [deep rumbling tone]
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    [door creaks]
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    Public toilets
    are very public places,
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    but once you enter a stall,
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    it becomes an extremely
    private place.
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    [water running]
    [faucet squeaks]
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    [deep rumbling tone]
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    When I was making the work,
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    I was very conscious
    of the world of the internet.
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    [door creaks]
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    There are many kinds
    of communities on the internet,
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    divided according
    to their interests,
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    as though each is in its own
    private room or stall.
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    [deep rumbling tone]
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    From time to time, the camera
    and its close-up coverage
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    of what is going on
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    intrudes by bringing the viewer
    into that space.
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    [crackling noise]
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    [camera shutter clicks]
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    [clicking sound]
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    [shutter clicking]
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    The world of concealed
    information–
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    which, in this video,
    has to do with the privacy
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    of the bathroom stall and its
    parallel in the internet–
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    is something that I keep in mind
    all the time.
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    [water splashing]
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    In public convenience,
    the water is constantly running.
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    We don't know where it's going.
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    its destination
    is hidden from us,
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    but if a lot of water
    is coming in,
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    it has to be going somewhere,
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    so there must be another world
    that lies beyond.
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    [water splashes]
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    [water gurgling]
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    In my work,
    the coming and going of water
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    is a way of envisioning
    a world beyond this one.
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    [water running]
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    [door creaks]
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    [footsteps]
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    [faucet squeaks]
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    [water running]
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    [water running]
    [footsteps]
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    [water running]
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    [faucet squeaks]
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    [water running]
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    [door creaks]
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    At the time I made this work,
    a friend of mine had a child
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    but immediately
    put it up for adoption.
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    I thought a lot
    about her situation,
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    and I used that idea
    in this work.
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    [door creaks]
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    [footsteps]
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    [toilet flushes]
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    I want the viewer to actively
    engage with the work.
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    I want them to wonder,
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    "What does this work
    mean to me?
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    [ shoes clicking ]
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    [ doors creak and shut ]
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    [ camera clicks ]
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    [ ANNOUNCER ] To learn more about
    "Art in the Twenty-First Century"
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    and its educational resources,
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    please visit us online at:
    PBS.org/Art21
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    “Art in the Twenty-First Century” is available on DVD.
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    The companion book is also available.
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    To order, visit us online at: shopPBS.org
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    or call PBS Home Video at:
    1-800-PLAY-PBS
Title:
Tabaimo in "Boundaries" - Season 6 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"Art in the Twenty-First Century" broadcast series
Duration:
11:00

English (United States) subtitles

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