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[Carrie Mae Weems: "Roaming"]
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I think that architecture,
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in its essence--
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much of the fabric of it--
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is very much about power.
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If we think about a place like Rome--
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where I did a residency a few years ago--
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what one is made to feel
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is the power of the state
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in relationship to the lower subject.
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To the lower subject--
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to the general populace.
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You are always aware that you are, sort of,
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a minion in relationship to this enormous edifice--
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the edifice of power.
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What is this relationship of power to you?
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And what is your relationship to power?
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And how do you contest it?
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And how do you try to make
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someone aware of it?
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So, you crawl towards the church.
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[LAUGHS]
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And so I thought, then,
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perhaps if I could use my own skin
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in a sort of series of performances.
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That I could use my own body as a way
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of leading the viewer into those spaces--
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highly aware--
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and challenging those spaces.
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Challenging them,
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and marking them for really what they are.
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That they are, of course, monumental,
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and they're beautiful,
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and the edifices are extraordinary.
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But, I'm not confused about what they're supposed to mean,
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and what they're supposed to do.
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Maybe most people are sort of aware of them, too.
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They just sort of accept--
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they submit to them.
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And I'm, of course, more interested in challenging them,
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even when I think that they're sort of sublime in their way.