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[Ursula von Rydingsvard: "Ona"]
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[buzzing sounds from machinery]
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[Polich Talix Fine Art Foundry, Rock Tavern, NY]
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I'm trying to get a look that has a wide range--
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a variation--
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between the different colors.
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[VON RYDINGSVARD] And then I did this a lot.
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[PHILIP CASTORE] I see that. I like it.
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[VON RYDINGSVARD] And I did this.
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But I really exaggerated.
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[CASTORE] Okay.
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[VON RYDINGSVARD] But you, with your leaky lines,
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might have made the best thing of all,
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do you know what I mean?
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[Philip Castore, Patina Artist]
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[CASTORE] Well, we'll see!
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[VON RYDINGSVARD] We'll see what it looks like.
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I'm just trying to figure out what is going to work!
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Next to a big big big Corten steel building.
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The Barclays Center piece "Ona"
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is really the most major piece that I've done in bronze.
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I have never done anything quite that scale.
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And "ona" in Polish refers to 'her' or 'she',
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And I thought that there's something about that sculpture
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that has some hint of a female feel.
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It is a simple name and it has a reference
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that makes sense in my head
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in terms of what that sculpture looks like.
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I was surprised I was using colors.
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I can't stand colors ordinarily
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because, in part, I don't know how to use them.
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But, also, they feel abrasive to my eyes.
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So I was amazed that I was doing this with a patina.
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I really didn't know where I was going,
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and I kept thinking during the whole process
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of my putting on the patina,
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"Ursula, you should have stuck to your black!"
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But I was convinced that for the Barclays Center,
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which is so loaded with that metal look--
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the rusting Corten steel.
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I was so convinced that I wanted something that was lighter and brighter.
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[CASTORE] The heat opens up the pores of the bronze
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and readily accepts the chemical.
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You can have a wet application or a dry application.
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It gives you different looks.
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[VON RYDINGSVARD] I've been able to make the wood do acrobatics,
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and I sort of twist it to go into places
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it never thought it could or would want to.
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I can't do that with metal.
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There's a level of frustration
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because I feel like I'm not in as much control.
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The beautiful thing that the wood can do
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is give me so many details.
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It gives me a psychological base
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and details of that base with which to work.
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I'm definitely not trying to replicate the wood.
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And I'm wanting it to feel like metal,
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because it obviously will feel like it.
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And I want it to look like metal.
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But bronze in any case, in time,
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sort of finds its own patina,
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and then it takes on its own look.
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Often these sculptures are large.
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Often I'm on scaffolding.
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I'm on scaffolding, in fact, one-third of my life.
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There's always this urgency
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with my having only so many years left.
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And when they say, "When you get older, life gets easier,"--
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it does not.
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You know, my biggest hope is that I get more courage,
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I get more trust in myself,
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I get more faith--
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that I'm able to do things that maybe I wasn't able to do before.
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And I feel unbelievably lucky to have the kind of talent--
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the kind of brains--
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that are working with me.
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I've been working in Brooklyn for thirty-four years.
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It does make me happy that there's a piece of mine in Brooklyn.
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It was very clear that this was not a museum situation.
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I wanted this to feel
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as though one could approach the work...
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that one could approach it psychologically.
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One could also approach it physically.
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But they would both sort of blend.
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Somehow, I think that one could almost
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see with one's hands, as well,
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when one feels it.
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It just gives me pleasure to have the possibility
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to enable people to be exposed to art,
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should they want to.
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It's nothing that I would wish to force upon them.
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But that makes me feel good.