-
[ギター音楽]
-
ジェフ・ウォール: 常に写真を探しています
-
私の仕事です
-
写真を探す
-
被写体という人もいます
-
私は出発点と呼びます
-
同じことです
-
何かが起こるんです
-
例えば2001年にこのドアを開けて外に出た時
-
3、4人の人が荷物を引きずって歩いているのが見えました
-
カメラを持っていたら写真を撮ったでしょう
-
けれど持っていなかった
-
だからこの出来事を再現する必要がありました
-
2ブロック歩いたところで青空と弧を描く高架橋が見えました
-
”よしここだ”そう思いました
-
それまでこのようなことをしたいと思ったことは
一度もありませんでした
-
偶然だったんです
-
この偶然により全く新しい発想が生まれました
-
何か写真を -
-
例えばこの本にのっている北斎の”駿州江尻”を見ていたとします
-
すぐに これは再現できるぞと思いつきます
-
私たちは何かが起きるのを待たなければなりません
-
そして一度それが起これば
もうやるしか無いんです
-
誰かが牛乳パックを持っていて
-
何かの拍子で撒き散らしてしまう
-
起こり得る話です
-
誰でもミルクはこぼします
ただ私はより洗練された方法で
-
見せているだけです
-
[柔らかな電子音楽]
-
生まれた時からこの街を知っています
-
人生のほとんどをこの街で過ごしました
そういう人は街が好きか ー
-
憎んでいるかでしょう
-
多くのことを知っている
-
多くのことがあった
だから私もバンクバーに複雑な思いを抱いています
-
ここで仕事をするということは
そういった感情と折り合いをつけることだと感じます
-
ある瞬間瞬間でどちらの感情が勝るかは
全くもって予測できません
-
私の作品がそういった感情を含んでいると思いたいものです
-
♪ ♪
-
いまだになぜ自分が絵描きにならなかったのかわかりません
-
1964年頃 私が19か20歳の時に絵をやめました
-
60年代の半ば概念芸術のような
オルタナティブアートが爆発的に生み出された時期でした
-
-
どういうわけか当時のバンクーバーは
その風潮にピッタリはまっていたんです
-
-
だから転向しました
-
スタジオ持ちの絵描きをやめたんです
-
スタジオは15歳の時に手に入れたものでした
-
知られていない対象に潜在的な力が宿っていると解ったとき
-
本当に真剣に写真に取り組むことになったと思います
-
That had to do with the scale of the picture,
-
and it seemed to me there was simply
no technical reason
-
why photography couldn't become bigger.
-
[beeping of machine]
-
Photographs have a beautiful, molecular,
-
granular surface that both shows itself and
hides itself in the image it makes,
-
so there are qualities thatare revealed in
photography when it gets larger.
-
[Indistinct chatter]
-
After having seen some advertisements backlighted,
I thought,
-
"OK.
-
I'll try "the backlighted.
-
"It's kind of interesting.
-
It has a kind of luminosity that's really
different."
-
So then I just started using it, and it worked.
-
It created an object, and the object was sort
of, you know, emphatic.
-
There's no real rules about–for me at least–
-
how I should proceed, so sometimes, I build
replicas…
-
but when you start building a replica,
-
it can get really exciting and technically
interesting and artistically very absorbing
-
to make that thing.
-
[Jeff Wall] Where are you looking?
-
— My hand, my thumb.
-
[Jeff Wall] Look at Andrew's face.
-
Now.
-
Yeah, that's it.
-
Just like that.
-
Oh, that's good.
-
Hold it.
-
Go.
-
Stop.
-
Go.
-
Stop.
-
Nothing in my pictures is fake.
-
Everything that you see happening is really
happening.
-
— Action.
-
[Camera clicks, flash pops]
-
Good one.
-
[Camera clicks, flash pops]
-
Good.
-
There's really no difference between capturing
a gesture by accident and capturing a gesture
-
by design,
-
so it's not really possible to have fakery
in photography, not really.
-
♪ ♪
-
I don't think it's very easy to practice any
art form very well,
-
so there's no reason why photography should
be easy.
-
It's easy to click the shutter.
-
— But they're gonna do a whole run-through first.
-
So I need you guys on your marks just to
double-check all the marks before we start.
-
[Jeff Wall] But bringing things together, however you
do it,
-
is always difficult because the standards
are high.
-
— You're standing in a way that doesn't
make you look very tough.
-
— OK.
-
— Make yourself look like someone who's ready
to do something bad.
-
—OK.
-
[Jeff Wall] I think working with performers, it's always
very collaborative.
-
—Look it yourself if you want to see yourself
up close.
-
[Jeff Wall] They always give me things that I didn't even
know I wanted from them.
-
— Looks good out here.
-
— You look like a sculpture by Michelangelo
right now.
-
[laughs]
-
— Which is great.
-
— Action.
-
[Camera clicks] Good.
-
Let's do another one.
-
Ready… action.
-
[Jeff Wall] I've learned that in order to do what I like
to do I need to have an open-ended schedule.
-
It could take 5 days, could take 10 days,
it could take 20 days.
-
I don't really know.
-
You can shoot hundreds of pictures of the
same thing, and one of them's always different
-
from all the others.
-
It just is the way it goes,
-
and that picture discloses something that
wasn't in the plan.
-
It was based on things I'd seen from the bringing
of a person under the control of others to
-
a place,
-
and you see that all over the news.
-
That doesn't happen till discussion has come
to an end, and so I added something.
-
He talks.
-
And the second thing that happens is the other
one listens.
-
Neither of those things is likely to happen
in that situation.
-
Talking is great in photography because it
can't be captured.
-
It's the elusive element,
-
and that shows you the limits of the art form
you're in.
-
I love that about it.
-
It always escapes.
-
[strumming acoustic music]
-
Pictures can never narrate.
-
They can only imply a narrative,
-
but they can never deliver it.
-
So what happens is when the viewer's having
that experience what they're really doing
-
is writing the story.
-
They're intuiting a narrative for themselves,
-
which not be the same narrative for everybody.
-
Well, the title of that picture is "Daybreak
on an Olive Farm in the Negev, Israel."
-
The picture included the Bedouin farm workers,
the olive grove,
-
and one of the biggest prisons in Israel.
-
So it was a great subject of many things.
-
Some sleeping under the stars, who were probably
poor,
-
and others sleeping in incarceration.
-
Who knows what they are,
-
and there could be thousands of them there.
-
Probably I identify with those kind of people
in some way,
-
and I think I identify with all the people
I photograph in some way.
-
So I think artistically a subject has no connection
to the viewer unless the picture creates the
-
connection by its artistry,
-
by its beauty.
-
So let's say you come into the gallery and
you see a picture of a homeless person
-
and you experience it in a way you hadn't
experienced it before
-
because you hadn't seen it in that picture
before.
-
Then you will know that the beauty of that
picture was caused by that person somehow,
-
and as soon as you realize that that subject
can cause that experience,
-
you've changed your own relation to that subject.
-
That's the social value of art, that it does
that not by convincing you of anything,
-
telling you you should do this, but by giving
you an experience or creating an experience
-
that itself,
-
yeah, alters something.
-
♪ ♪
-
The mainstream of my work has been a kind
of realism because it's devoted to contemplating
-
photography as a phenomenon,
-
but I don't want to be obliged to a be a reporter
all the time,
-
even a pseudo reporter.
-
Works of pictorial art have to be something
that can be looked at endlessly.
-
Supposing it flashed into my mind this image
of the ocean for no reason.
-
Like a daydream or a moment of imagination.
-
When you have flashes like that, they only
last just an amazingly short time,
-
and they're gone, but you remember them.
-
They set off a photographic possibility.
-
For me, there's something
called a picture
-
that is there all the time.
-
♪ ♪
-
I'm always searching for that
picture, the next one.
-
♪ ♪
-
[soft electronic music]