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Brian Jungen in "Vancouver" - Season 8 | Art21

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    [Brian Jungen]
    Eu não cresci na costa.
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    Eu realmente gosto de estar perto do oceano. Mas eu gosto de ir
    visitá-lo e depois ir embora novamente.
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    Quando eu morava no litoral, eu
    fui muito influenciado pela arte das Primeiras Nações
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    na costa,
    e eu estava interessado em como algo
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    muito específico
    como os motifs da costa e imagens costeiras
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    passar a ser algo que era realmente
    associado a toda a província
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    Eu tinha ouvido falar da última orca assassina, eu
    estava saindo do Aquário de Vancouver, então eu queria filmá-la, então
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    e foi quando eu meio que tropecei
    sobre o que costumava ser uma grande indústria,
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    a indústria baleeira no
    Costa oeste.
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    A imagem da baleia foi bastante difundida,
    difundida em todas as culturas nativas marítimas.
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    Quando fiz a primeira, todas
    desse tipo vieram junto
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    trabalhando com aquelas cadeiras deixei muitas
    pistas que as pessoas poderiam dizer o que eram.
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    Você pode comprar essas cadeiras
    em qualquer lugar,
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    e são baratas.
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    O tipo de mudança que acontece,
    a faísca, certo,
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    isso faz com que as pessoas se interessem.
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    ♪ ♪
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    Se você perguntar a qualquer índio nativo
    "De onde você é?"
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    eles realmente não diriam a
    cidade em que por acaso moravam.
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    Eles diriam de onde suas
    relações de sangue são.
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    Eu sou Dane-zaa, então isso é uma
    parte muito específica do país.
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    Mas me mudei para Vancouver quando
    eu tinha 18 anos para ir para uma escola de arte,
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    e essa foi a primeira vez que morei em uma
    cidade.
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    Eu amo as oportunidades e a cultura
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    ao seu redor quando você está em uma cidade, mas
    eu prefiro viver aqui fora.
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    É bom ver todo essa sálvia
    florindo, né?
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    Minha infância foi passada em uma
    fazenda de gado muito grande,
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    então, quando eu era criança,
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    Eu passei muito tempo fora na
    floresta com os cachorros.
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    Eles eram como os meus
    guardiões.
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    Ed é um vira-lata do norte de Alberta.
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    Ele é o chefe deste lugar de
    algumas maneiras.
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    Por exemplo, todos ouvimos ao Ed.
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    Então, sim, isso é do outro lado da
    estrada pra lá, esses pastos fazem parte da propriedade
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    e lá em cima na encosta e lá em cima também.
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    My ancestors were promised
    they could
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    either live on reserve, or
    they would be given land,
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    but none of it was honored.
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    ♪ ♪
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    When I started working with
    shoes in the nineties,
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    I went into Niketown.
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    They had sneakers of theirs in
    glass vitrines,
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    and I thought that was so
    strange.
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    I started to make connections between
    the commodification of those shoes and
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    the same thing that's happened to Native art.
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    And then there was just kind
    of a strange coincidence that the color
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    schemes and designs look very similar to
    Northwest Coast masks
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    There was this kind of illicit
    thrill I got by buying these Air Jordans and, like,
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    immediately starting to cut them up
    and stuff.
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    So, yeah, and that was my
    first kind of foray
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    into making objects.
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    [chains rattling]
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    - Tch, tch.
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    I'm a pretty quiet person.
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    I was kind of raised around cowboy culture, so
    there's a lot of aggression
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    but it's not really how I approach the
    world.
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    - That's right. Attaboy.
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    So I didn't have much access to culture
    growing up in the north, so I had,
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    like one television station AM radio,
    kind of thing.
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    My folks died when I was 7, so
    I just kind
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    kind of like
    buried myself in these--my imagination.
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    I used to make artwork because
    I thought
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    I could hide behind it,
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    and that turned out not to be
    the case.
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    My artwork became so tied up
    with my identity, especially as Native Canadian,
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    that it was almost impossible to talk
    about my artwork without my identity.
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    An uncle of mine showed me how
    to make drums years ago, and I'm not a very good
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    musician, but whenever I'm home, like, my
    cousins will kind of thrust a drum at me
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    to, like, participate, and it's great. I
    love it,
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    but I wanted to make some of my own.
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    I've always also really liked modern
    furniture.
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    So I kind of used those chairs
    to make these drums,
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    give them a life other than a
    utilitarian furniture, right?
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    Kind of give them a voice.
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    [strumming guitar]
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    Yeah, I--I like vehicles.
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    I have a nice Impala now.
    It's my summer car really.
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    I cruise around in that.
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    ♪ ♪
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    When I was an adolescent and
    into my 20s,
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    I had to figure out who I was
    and kind of come out of the closet,
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    but that's really not an issue anymore.
    I think gay culture's kind of mainstream...
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    and I never really fit into that
    stereotype anyways.
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    My family are hunters. it's very
    common in Canada,
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    but a lot of my family have freezers to
    keep moose meat in,
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    and a lot of the times, they're outside.
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    When I was visiting family, and I started
    making these temporary sculptures and
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    sticking them on top of the freezers
    because they were like the perfect
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    pedestal,
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    and I liked kind of seeing
    that, like some people would just--they thought like
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    "Who put all this crap on here?" and other people, they would look at it and say,
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    "Oh, that's an
    artwork, right?" So I decided to take that into the studio.
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    I like using things people can recognize
    that they see around them every day.
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    [synth music]
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    [Sewing machine running]
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    This new series I just
    started, it's gonna be shown in Vancouver in January.
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    I wanted to revisit the material it's
    been about 10 years,
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    and I wanted to do it in a new way.
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    When I first made them, I was just kind
    of slowly taking them apart piece by piece,
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    and now I just am much more
    fluid with it.
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    - Oh, there are like kind of
    horns.
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    [Saw whirring]
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    I work very intuitively.
    We just tighten everything up
    and then
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    start cutting see what happens.
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    I--I don't have an idea of what
    it's gonna look
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    like in my head, so it will be
    finished when it feels finished.
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    You know, I always say to myself,
    "I'm not gonna work like this anymore,
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    and things are gonna be done
    weeks ahead of the opening,"
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    but I guess a part of me still
    likes the kind
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    of intensity of working down
    to the wire.
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    - This will be attached?
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    Have you figured out how
    that's gonna work?
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    - No.
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    - No, no.
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    - So...
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    Yeah.
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    - Well, and hope for the best.
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    [laughs]
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    [synth sounds]
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    I wanted to make these
    ones more abstract.
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    I think when I made the first
    ones I was
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    interested in referencing them to what
    people thought native art is.
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    Now I've kind of moved away
    from that.
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    And some of these just feel
    like 20th century modern sculpture.
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    [strumming guitar]
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    I'm involved in a contemporary art
    community that is very exclusive
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    ♪ ♪
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    I don't know. There's all
    different sorts of art worlds.
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    There's a whole Native
    American art world.
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    ♪ ♪
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    I kind of have a bit of a hand
    in that.
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    ♪ ♪
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    If I hadn't gone to art
    school, if my parents hadn't died,
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    I probably would have wound up working on the family farm
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    and making art in secret.
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    ♪ ♪
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    [soft electronic music]
Title:
Brian Jungen in "Vancouver" - Season 8 | Art21
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"Art in the Twenty-First Century" broadcast series
Duration:
13:26

English subtitles

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