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John Baldessari in "Systems" - Season 5 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21

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    [JOHN BALDESSARI] I'm always interested in
    things that we don't call art,
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    and I'd say, "Well, why not?
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    I mean, why--you know, what
    could I do this to make it art?
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    How could I change people's minds?
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    [machine humming]
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    I am making art.
    I am making art.
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    You know, I love it.
    Like--like, you know, all of
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    a sudden, because I said
    it's art, somebody believes me.
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    What interests me in life is the
    absurdity in life.
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    [laughs]
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    [door closes]
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    - Hey, John.
    - Hi, Marie.
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    - Okay, I got these new ones.
    - Oh, good.
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    - A couple of them...
    - Good.
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    - that I have some questions 
    about. I'll put them up.
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    - Art making is about making a choice.
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    For me, it was like you choose
    one thing over another:
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    this color over that color
    or this object over that object
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    or– you know, on and on and on.
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    And you have to make a choice.
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    -Okay, so the questions that
    I had about these ones are,
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    I know that you want these
    framed individually, but do you
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    also want these framed
    individually, or are they just
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    gonna be one print that's framed
    in one frame?
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    -They'll be in a single frame.
    -Okay.
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    -Well, maybe not now but
    later, you know, I have other
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    questions that we could talk
    about, yeah.
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    -Okay. No problem.
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    -My emergence in the art world:
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    I was linked with
    conceptual art, minimal art.
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    never quite totally subscribed
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    to it; I thought it was
    a little boring.
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    But there were a lot of things
    I didn't want to shed,
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    and one of them was
    being tasteful.
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    That's one of the reasons I gave
    up painting, because it was all
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    about being tasteful: you know,
    the right red next to the right
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    blue, and you're very carefully
    mixing the colors.
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    I just decided to be
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    very systematic about it
    and use the color wheel.
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    Yeah, I like the guy–
    the green guy.
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    He might be too green.
    I don't know.
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    -Oh, yeah?
    - I'm still thinking about it.
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    - Yeah, a little toxic green.
    - Yeah. Yeah.
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    I don't know.
    Anything else?
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    My father was Catholic.
    My mother was Lutheran.
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    I went to a Methodist church.
    That was the local church.
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    I certainly got a love of
    literature, reading the bible,
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    You know, the King James version.
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    And I got a real sense of
    moral obligation, and I think
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    that's why I was a later starter
    in art, because I–
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    art didn't seem to do anybody
    any good that I could see.
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    It didn't heal bones.
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    It didn't help people find
    shelter or whatever.
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    And I wanted to be a social
    worker, I think.
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    Got to say, I owe it to
    my sister.
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    I got my degree in art, and she said,
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    "Well, how are you gonna
    support yourself?"
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    [chuckles]
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    So I got a teaching credential.
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    Teaching is about communication.
    Lecturing doesn't do it.
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    You have to see the light in the
    students' eyes that they get it.
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    And if you don't see the light,
    then you try another approach
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    and another approach
    until they get it.
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    And then I realized that art was
    about communication.
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    I was learning how to
    communicate by teaching.
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    And– and then the art infected
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    my classroom teaching, trying to
    be inventive there.
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    And in effect, I was saying,
    "the art I do is what I'm
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    talking about in the classroom,
    and vice versa."
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    You know, they're
    interchangeable.
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    One thing– I was trying to teach
    students how to look.
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    I said, "If you're looking at
    two things, don't look at them;
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    look between them...
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    because there's that stuff too. That's– this is important."
    But we prioritize.
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    We– you know, if I'm looking at
    this wall over here, it's normal
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    to look at something pinned
    to the wall.
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    I'm not looking at the space
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    between those two things.
    But that's very important.
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    Words are just a way we
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    communicate, images are a way
    we communicate, and I couldn't
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    figure out why they had to be
    in different baskets.
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    I think in my multiple-image pieces,
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    I probably have this
    idea that there's a word behind them.
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    I'm probably building like
    a writer or a poet builds 
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    with words.
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    -John came to my studio at UCLA,
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    and we had a meeting, and
    he said, "I have an opportunity
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    for you," which was very exciting,
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    I mean, just to hear that, right?
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    Like, I was like–
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    You know, I knew some of my
    classmates were maybe working
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    for him, doing a little painting
    or working doing a little
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    Photoshop for him
    or something like that.
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    And I said, "Wow, okay,
    what is it?"
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    And he's like, "Well, I just got this dog,
    and I need someone to walk him."
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    [laughing]
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    And I said, "Okay."
    I'm like, "Let me think about it."
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    He knew I was having a little
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    trouble at school, you know,
    like, with my work and going
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    through a little grad school
    crisis in terms of ideas and so on.
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    So he said, "Okay, every Monday,
    you have to bring work to me."
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    And so we began.
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    I think he taught me to be human
    when it comes to the work.
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    You know, there is something
    very humble about the way he works.
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    He comes here every morning
    at the same time.
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    He shows you how, you know,
    it's a long process.
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    I mean, it's a lifetime
    commitment to the work.
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    - In the early years, I would
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    just make work, and it would be
    shipped to the gallery.
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    And then one would spend three
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    or four days moving works around
    and seeing how one spoke to the
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    other, how the size of one work
    would relate to the size of the other,
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    you know, all of those
    problems that would make hanging
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    one work next to another less
    good than another hanging.
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    [chuckles]
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    And I would always ship more
    work than I needed because you
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    never know what you're going to need.
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    I did a retrospective show
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    that started at the Museum of
    Contemporary art in Los Angeles.
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    And I saw how they had a model
    ad worked with everything,
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    and I said, "Well, why don't
    I do that?"
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    This is a model of the
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    Haus Lange by Mies Van Der Rohe
    In Krefeld, Germany.
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    One of the principle things I'm
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    doing with the Mies Van Der Rohe
    Haus is to use his materials in
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    a way that would be more than he
    would have used them.
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    And the principle material here
    is brick, which he wasn't
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    particularly fond of.
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    Curiously, he did work in his
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    father's brickyard, so he did
    have some familiarity with the material.
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    All of the outside walls, where
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    there's a window, they're
    covered up with fake brick.
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    So you will see no windows whatsoever.
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    And Mies Van Der Rohe was very
    careful in framing the views of the garden.
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    Where there is a window in
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    the walls, there will be
    substituted views of the
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    Pacific Ocean and landscape
    in Southern California.
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    But in front of each window,
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    there'll be one Mies Van Der Rohe
    chair where you can sit and
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    contemplate the view.
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    Then in one wall, I'm having
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    manufactured as an addition
    a couch in the shape of an ear,
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    flanked left and right by two
    upturned noses as sconces
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    so that you'll either have light
    or flowers coming out of the nostrils.
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    So I figured it's everything
    that tMies Van Der Rohe would hate.
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    And rather than glorify
    Mies Van Der Rohe–
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    He's had enough glorification--
    I just thought I would, you know,
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    poke a little fun of him,
    do reverse Mies Van Der Rohe.
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    Actually, I started using stills
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    from movies not because they
    were from the movies;
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    I could get the pictures cheaply.
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    For me, it's using this
    data bank of images
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    people carry around in
    their head, and then playing and
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    rearranging those images
    for them.
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    A lot of photographs I had
    bought would be from newspapers.
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    And they would be local
    celebrities, whatever:
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    The major, the fire chief,
    some dignitary.
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    And a lot them, they would be
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    pointing to things, shaking
    hands, smiling at the–
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    You know, it's a photo op,
    you know, kind of thing.
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    Standing with the president;
    that sort of thing.
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    And I was attracted but repulsed
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    by these, and I realized why
    I was repulsed by them was that
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    I was there, isolated in my
    studio, and these people were
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    making decisions that would
    probably affect me, and,
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    you know, I was not doing
    anything about it.
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    And that was one of the
    arguments I had with art in the
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    first places, that, you know,
    it's not doing anything.
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    I was using these price 
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    stickers, and I just put them
    over the faces, and I said,
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    "Wow."
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    The phrase I keep using is,
    it leveled the playing field.
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    All of a sudden, they had no
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    power on me and really saw them
    for what they were.
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    They were replaceable even
    though the person changes.
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    I think my idea is this:
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    not so much structure that it's inhibiting–
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    I mean,
    that's there's no wiggle room–
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    but not so loose that
    it could be anything.
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    I guess it's like a corral.
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    It's a corral around your idea:
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    That you can move
    but not too much.
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    And it's that limited movement
    that promotes creativity.
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    I've been working over the years
    with various body parts.
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    I think I started out with noses.
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    And then ears.
    Then noses and ears.
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    And now I'm doing foreheads
    with furrows
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    and eyebrows.
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    You know, you always come back
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    to the same idea but from
    a different direction.
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    Yeah, we're gonna do
    dog eyebrows next.
Title:
John Baldessari in "Systems" - Season 5 - "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:
15:04

English subtitles

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