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IÑIGO MANGLANO-OVALLE:
If art for me is a platform from which to speak,
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but not tell you something?
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That’s good.
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And if that’s a way in which I give you a
platform from which to think and debate it,
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that’s even better, because ultimately
art for me does not reside in the object,
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it resides in what’s said about the object.
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All my work, even the most formal work, has...
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an underlying politics to it.
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But I don’t want to reveal my position.
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In LE BAISER or “the Kiss”
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I’m washing windows in Mies van der Rohe’s
Fansworth House out in Plano, Illinois.
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The camera outside is always mic-ed to
the sound of the squeegee on the glass.
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And it’s very sort of ambient in
one way and then very physical.
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The squeegee squeaks and
sarcastically kisses the building.
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(MUSIC)
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Whenever the camera is inside the
pane of glass or inside the building,
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there’s an ethereal sort of electronic music
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which is a single moment of a
guitar solo by the band KISS,
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and then that little guitar, nanosecond,
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is stretched to make the sound piece or
the score for all the interior shots.
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I have a strong connection
to architecture in my work.
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At a very young age I was taken by
my parents to see Mies’ architecture.
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For me, on one level, the piece was just
about visiting a shrine of modernity.
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It was about trying to figure out a
way to actually touch the building.
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You’re three things as the actor.
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You’re artist, you’re
laborer, and you’re architect.
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You’re artist because you’re making the film
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and because sometimes when
you’re washing the windows
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the camera is watching your hand make a gesture.
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Almost a painting gesture across the pane.
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You’re also just simply washing a window.
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So it’s mundane.
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And, then you’re outside the
building tending to its form.
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So you’re the architect.
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And inside is a young woman
spinning some discs on a platform
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with headphones being separated by the…
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a thin skin of transparency.
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But ultimately total separation.
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The female actor at one moment in the piece
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actually raises her eyes and
looks straight into the camera,
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thereby looks into the viewer of the
installation and acknowledges them or says,
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I see you and that’s the one moment for me that
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she’s able to penetrate through the architecture.
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Of course LE BAISER is about love,
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but it’s a kind of restrained love.
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I thought what we would do
is run through the edit.
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The School of Architecture
in Chicago auctioned off
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breaking the windows at the
Mies van der Rohe’s Crown Hall.
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They were going to renovate, put new glass in.
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As it turns out, the winner of the auction
is Mies’s grandson who is also an architect.
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I was interested in this whole
notion of almost like patricide,
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you know the son breaking the father’s temple.
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The show in New York is a show that I think is
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kind of difficult to negotiate
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because there is no apparent sort of common theme.
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I’ve been wanting to make
this umbrella for a long time.
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When you actually look at an umbrella,
there’s so many complex curves in that fabric.
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There are so many parabolic equations.
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It’s very much like a flower.
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That’s probably one of the best
designs out there in the world.
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I enlisted the help of a fabricator that
does prototypes for stealth bombers.
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It’s called BULLETPROOF UMBRELLA.
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And it’s exactly that.
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It’s made out of graphite and
Kevlar and space age materials.
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So I think it actually responds in
many ways to the climate of our times.
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Although it does it very quietly.
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My mother would freak out.
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She’s from Bogotá and…
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and an open umbrella indoors is like
bad luck for the rest of your life.
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The jack, very much like the
umbrella takes an every day object
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and sort of scales it up
and deforms one axis of it.
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What you end up having is this,
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it’s almost like missile that points up
and almost touches the ceiling itself.
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There are many connections between
these things and I think it’s just,
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for me important not to make it readily apparent.
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This sort of troublesome
condition is what I’m looking for.
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On a very, sort of, formal sense,
the exhibition is all about color.
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So the red film on the window
of the gallery is a work itself.
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It’s called FROM RED TO ORANGE AND ORANGE TO RED.
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Going from high alert to not so high alert.
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I’ve been very interested in weather patterns that
occur both inside and outside of architecture.
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In the case of RANDOM SKY in Chicago,
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the weather station is outside
and takes the temperature,
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barometric pressure, wind speed, wind direction.
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All these streams of data connect
directly to a set of computers
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that are running a program that generates
these blue and white scan lines.
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When I decided to do this
project I met Mark Hereld,
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an astrophysicist at Argon National Labs.
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MARK HERELD: I was asked originally
to help the Hyde Park Arts Center
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figure out how to build this façade.
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We have a large effort in what’s
called scientific visualization,
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we think about ways to sort of
tame these herds of computers
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that are intended present environments
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that are large enough that
people can step into them,
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become directly involved with
what’s being put out on the screen.
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The outside world is coupling
to this internal universe.
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So there is a kind of little
bit of a living ecology there.
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MANGLANO-OVALLE: We got to a certain
point where I needed to consider sound,
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and in this case I worked with a young artist
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by the name of Rick Gribenas
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who is an artist as well as a composer.
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RICK GRIBENAS: RANDOM SKY is really
just an examination of this building
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and its architecture and the
space that is contained within it
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and the space that kind of surrounds it.
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It’s definitely an exploration.
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It’s a, you know, the kind of great lengths that
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we as humans go through to kind
of understand our environment
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and kind of adjust our environment.
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MANGLANO-OVALLE: RANDOM SKY
addresses that idea of the arbitrary
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or the randomness or the uncontrollable,
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the impossibility of our desire for stability.
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CLOUD PROTOTYPE #1 was a thunderstorm
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that was captured by the department of
atmospheric sciences at University of Illinois.
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I watched the three-dimensional
data development as a storm
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and at a certain moment I said, “Right there.
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That’s the moment I want.”
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It’s about stopping time.
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It was just before the storm erupts.
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Capturing ephemera is an impossibility.
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And in the end you really
haven’t captured ephemera,
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you’ve made a sculpture.
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The space between things is just as important
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or more important than the
space that things occupy.
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Once you enter the exhibition,
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this little infrared video
of my son at five months old
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is neglected by you because
as soon as you walk in,
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you see the iceberg in the cloud.
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Another sculpture is so
miniscule you can step on it.
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Red Fist and it’s in a central location,
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it’s dismissed by the viewer.
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Red Fist actually came about playing
with my son a year-old with Play dough,
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it’s all about just grabbing
things and holding them.
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So I would roll little balls
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and he would grab them
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and we squished them
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and his hand would open up
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and I would see this glorious, like,
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shape that’s made by his fist.
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SEARCH was a piece where the
architecture of the site,
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this bullfight ring down in
Tijuana sort of called it forth.
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I mean the bullfight ring already looked
like a speaker facing up into the sky.
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The bullfight ring was
converted into a radio telescope
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that would search for the real aliens only
fifty meters south of the U.S. border.
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And for me it was a joke.
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I wanted to do a piece about alienation
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and about UFOs and about the alien
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and about immigration.
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When I first came to United States as a baby,
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you know I came in as a resident alien.
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And SEARCH was titled SEARCH (EN BÚSQUEDA),
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the subtitle was Searching for the Real Aliens.
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In Tijuana everybody from cab drivers
to artists to politicians got the joke.
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I grew up with parents that were always
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having to shift the family from
Madrid to Bogotá to the United States,
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so the world was very small at a very young age
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and I almost had to learn that there were borders.
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The General Service Administration asked me
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to propose a work for the Immigration
Naturalization Service Building.
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Now it’s part of Homeland Security.
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I actually like the idea,
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because a whole host of
people that I know have been
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through that building as what they call clients.
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So LA TORMENTA, these two clouds, or THE STORM,
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there’s a kind of critique that’s going on there
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because it’s a storm system that arrives
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and historically all waves of
immigration to the U.S. have been storms.
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And have gone through
turbulence, upon their arrival,
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and have caused turbulence
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and all of those waves come
with a great deal of hope,
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and a great deal of anxiety.
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And that’s what a thunderstorm is.
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It’s one of the most destructive
and most productive events.
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It was about the duality of that,
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and duality of hope and anxiety
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and the fact that the piece in a
sense reflects its public in a way,
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you know that they are the storm.
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La Tormenta somos nosotros.