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Scenes from "My Architect"

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    One thing I wanted to say about film making is -- about this film --
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    in thinking about some of the wonderful talks we've heard here,
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    Michael Moschen, and some of the talks about music,
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    this idea that there is a narrative line,
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    and that music exists in time.
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    A film also exists in time; it's an experience
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    that you should go through emotionally.
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    And in making this film I felt that so many of the documentaries I've seen
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    were all about learning something,
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    or knowledge, or driven by talking heads, and driven by ideas.
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    And I wanted this film to be driven by emotions,
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    and really to follow my journey.
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    So instead of doing the talking head thing, instead it's composed of scenes,
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    and we meet people along the way.
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    We only meet them once.
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    They don't come back several times, so it really chronicles a journey.
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    It's something like life, that once you get in it
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    you can't get out.
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    There are two clips I want to show you,
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    the first one is a kind of hodgepodge,
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    its just three little moments, four little moments
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    with three of the people who are here tonight.
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    It's not the way they occur in the film,
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    because they are part of much larger scenes.
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    They play off each other in a wonderful way.
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    And that ends with a little clip of my father, of Lou,
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    talking about something that is very dear to him,
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    which is the accidents of life.
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    I think he felt that the greatest things in life were accidental,
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    and perhaps not planned at all.
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    And those three clips will be followed by a scene of
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    perhaps what, to me, is really his greatest building
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    which is a building in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
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    He built the capital over there.
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    And I think you'll enjoy this building, it's never been seen --
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    it's been still photographed, but never photographed by a film crew.
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    We were the first film crew in there.
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    So you'll see images of this remarkable building.
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    A couple of things to keep in mind when you see it,
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    it was built entirely by hand,
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    I think they got a crane the last year.
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    It was built entirely by hand off bamboo scaffolding,
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    people carrying these baskets of concrete on their heads,
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    dumping them in the forms.
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    It is the capital of the country,
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    and it took 23 years to build,
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    which is something they seem to be very proud of over there.
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    It took as long as the Taj Mahal.
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    Unfortunately it took so long that Lou never saw it finished.
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    He died in 1974.
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    The building was finished in 1983.
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    So it continued on for many years
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    after he died.
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    Think about that when you see that building,
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    that sometimes the things we strive for so hard in life we never get to see finished.
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    And that really struck me about my father,
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    in the sense that he had such belief
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    that somehow, doing these things
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    giving in the way that he gave, that something good would come out of it,
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    even in the middle of a war, there was a war with Pakistan at one point,
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    and the construction stopped totally and he kept working,
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    because he felt, "Well when the war is done
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    they'll need this building."
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    So, those are the two clips I'm going to show.
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    Roll that tape.
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    (Applause)
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    Richard Saul Wurman: I remember hearing him talk at Penn.
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    And I came home and I said to my father and mother,
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    "I just met this man: doesn't have much work,
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    and he's sort of ugly, funny voice,
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    and he's a teacher at school.
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    I know you've never heard of him, but just mark this day
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    that someday you will hear of him,
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    because he's really an amazing man."
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    Frank Gehry: I heard he had some kind of a fling with Ingrid Bergman. Is that true?
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    Nathaniel Kahn: If he did he was a very lucky man.
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    (Laughter)
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    NK: Did you hear that, really?
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    FG: Yeah, when he was in Rome.
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    Moshe Safdie: He was a real nomad.
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    And you know, when I knew him when I was in the office,
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    he would come in from a trip, and he would be in the office
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    for two or three days intensely, and he would pack up and go.
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    You know he'd be in the office till three in the morning working with us
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    and there was this kind of sense of the nomad in him.
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    I mean as tragic as his death was in a railway station,
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    it was so consistent with his life, you know?
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    I mean I often think I'm going to die in a plane,
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    or I'm going to die in an airport,
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    or die jogging without an identification on me.
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    I don't know why I sort of carry that
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    from that memory of the way he died.
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    But he was a sort of a nomad at heart.
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    Louis Kahn: How accidental our existences are really
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    and how full of influence by circumstance.
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    Man: We are the morning workers who come, all the time, here
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    and enjoy the walking, city's beauty and the atmosphere
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    and this is the nicest place of Bangladesh.
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    We are proud of it.
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    NK: You're proud of it?
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    Man: Yes, it is the national image of Bangladesh.
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    NK: Do you know anything about the architect?
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    Man: Architect? I've heard about him; he's a top-ranking architect.
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    NK: Well actually I'm here because I'm the architect's son,
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    he was my father.
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    Man: Oh! Dad is Louis Farrakhan?
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    NK: Yeah. No not Louis Farrakhan, Louis Kahn.
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    Man: Louis Kahn, yes!
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    (Laughter)
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    Man: Your father, is he alive?
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    NK: No, he's been dead for 25 years.
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    Man: Very pleased to welcome you back.
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    NK: Thank you.
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    NK: He never saw it finished, Pop.
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    No, he never saw this.
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    Shamsul Wares: It was almost impossible, building for a country like ours.
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    In 30, 50 years back, it was nothing, only paddy fields,
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    and since we invited him here,
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    he felt that he has got a responsibility.
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    He wanted to be a Moses here, he gave us democracy.
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    He is not a political man,
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    but in this guise he has given us
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    the institution for democracy, from where we can rise.
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    In that way it is so relevant.
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    He didn't care for how much money this country has,
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    or whether he would be able to ever finish this building,
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    but somehow he has been able to do it, build it, here.
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    And this is the largest project he has got in here, the poorest country in the world.
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    NK: It cost him his life.
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    SW: Yeah, he paid. He paid his life for this,
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    and that is why he is great and we'll remember him.
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    But he was also human.
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    Now his failure to satisfy the family life,
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    is an inevitable association of great people.
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    But I think his son will understand this,
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    and will have no sense of grudge,
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    or sense of being neglected, I think.
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    He cared in a very different manner,
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    but it takes a lot of time to understand that.
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    In social aspect of his life
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    he was just like a child, he was not at all matured.
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    He could not say no to anything,
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    and that is why, that he cannot say no to things,
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    we got this building today.
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    You see, only that way you can be able to understand him.
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    There is no other shortcut,
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    no other way to really understand him.
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    But I think he has given us this building
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    and we feel all the time for him,
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    that's why, he has given love for us.
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    He could not probably give the right kind of love for you,
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    but for us, he has given the people the right kind of love,
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    that is important.
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    You have to understand that.
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    He had an enormous amount of love,
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    he loved everybody.
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    To love everybody, he sometimes did not see
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    the very closest ones,
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    and that is inevitable for men of his stature.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Scenes from "My Architect"
Speaker:
Nathaniel Kahn
Description:

Nathaniel Kahn shares clips from his documentary "My Architect," about his quest to understand his father, the legendary architect Louis Kahn. It's a film with meaning to anyone who seeks to understand the relationship between art and love.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
10:10
TED edited English subtitles for Scenes from "My Architect"
TED added a translation

English subtitles

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