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Tauba Auerbach in "Bodies of Knowledge" - Season 11 | Art21

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    TAUBA AUERBACH: I want to
    learn new things constantly.
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    And I'm always trying to
    find the pattern behind things.
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    I've educated myself about
    a number of scientific or
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    mathematical
    principles through crafts
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    like weaving and paper marbling.
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    ♪ethereal ambient music♪
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    To marble paper, it's all
    about relationships and ratios.
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    You have to mix your paints so
    that they float on the water and
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    so that they spread out –
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    not too much, not too little.
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    ♪undulating ethereal music♪
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    There's a limit to how
    controlled it can be.
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    ♪♪♪
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    I like that idea quite a lot of
    cultivating your sensitivity in
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    this really
    practiced, purposeful way.
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    And I've used paper marbling as
    the source material for a lot of
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    my public works.
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    ♪♪♪
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    It seems appropriate to me
    to work in a lot of different
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    materials and
    media and processes...
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    because I'm focusing
    on connectivity and the
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    relationship between
    lots of different things.
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    Every time people
    come to my studio,
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    I like to show
    them these shelves,
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    because there are just so many
    treasures on them and things
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    that I like to live
    with and think with.
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    Some ashes of artwork
    that burned in a fire.
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    This is a sea sponge.
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    The water pressure where this
    creature lives is very extreme.
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    The architecture of this
    skeleton has been studied for
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    its strength.
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    It's a powerfully
    strong lattice shape.
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    I would say I had a really
    profound experience with this
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    puzzle, actually.
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    It takes over a thousand moves
    to disentangle this bar from
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    these rings.
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    I got to where there
    was just one ring left.
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    It turned out that having
    one ring left was sort of the
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    equivalent of having
    gone as far as possible
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    into a maze in the
    wrong direction.
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    [laughs]
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    And I had to
    completely backtrack,
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    put all the rings back on, and
    then take them off a slightly
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    different way.
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    And so I felt like this
    puzzle taught me a lot about the
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    assumptions that you make
    about progress along the way.
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    ♪ethereal synth music♪
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    I am quite compelled
    by things that just barely work.
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    The near-impossibility is key.
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    I stumbled upon this beading
    technique
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    via a chemist from Taiwan.
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    He's been using this
    technique to model molecules,
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    and in his models, the beads are
    the bonds between the atoms.
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    Now I'm trying to do something
    of my own with the technique.
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    I'm interested in the edges of
    where a system coheres and
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    where it starts to
    fray and come apart,
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    and also where the edges of our
    understanding and comprehension
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    fray and start to come apart...
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    like my own limitations and
    then some more collective limitations,
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    either because we
    haven't gotten there yet
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    or it's just really out of
    bounds for the human mind.
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    [mouse clicking]
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    ♪choral singing
    playing from computer♪
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    The kind of learning I'm really
    interested in is not just to
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    learn a fact but to change how
    I digest and think about all
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    [chuckling] future facts.
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    For example, my friend Cameron
    sent me this Bulgarian state
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    television choir record.
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    ♪singing in Bulgarian♪
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    -[Tauba VO] I felt like there
    were sounds in there that had
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    that effect on me or that I
    could never come back from,
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    in the best possible way.
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    The first time I was told about
    the idea of different sizes of
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    infinity, that was an
    idea I never came back from.
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    ♪Bulgarian
    singing continues♪
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    Encountering the idea of
    four-dimensional space and the
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    shapes that inhabit it has been
    a tool for retuning my gaze,
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    retuning my imagination.
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    Ideally, it would be nice to
    make something that isn't just
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    an image that a
    person might remember,
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    but an image that has a tiny
    effect on all images after that.
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    I love painting so much,
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    and there's so many different
    ways to approach it as
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    a technology.
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    ♪energetic
    oscillating synths♪
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    During college, I was just
    looking for a summer job,
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    and I thought, "I'm
    gonna try the sign shop!"
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    I worked at New Bohemia Signs in
    San Francisco as an apprentice
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    and assistant for
    about three years,
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    and they were just
    beautiful hand-painted signs.
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    ♪♪♪
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    In sign painting,
    if you go too fast,
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    you're gonna be sloppy.
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    But then if you go too
    slowly to try to be perfect,
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    it really doesn't
    look very graceful.
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    I really learned a lot about
    finding a kind of sweet spot,
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    which is something I think about
    a lot in lots of different ways.
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    ♪♪♪
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    I love painting and I
    think I'll always do it,
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    but I think I just select the
    medium that's gonna serve the
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    idea best, so
    sometimes that's painting,
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    but a painting can't do the same
    thing that a piece of glass can,
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    for example.
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    So when I felt like a certain
    set of ideas called for working
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    in glass, I went and
    learned how to flame-work glass.
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    That's my approach to
    materials and media.
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    [rumbling and churning]
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    The Wave Organ is one
    of my favorite places
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    in San Francisco.
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    It's pretty close
    to where I grew up.
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    [rumbling and churning]
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    Essentially, it's, like, a
    whole bunch of pipes that are
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    half-submerged in the water, and
    at different levels of the tide,
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    you get different
    sounds out of them.
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    I think I'm so attached to it
    because it exists across a
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    boundary of air
    and water and sand.
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    [rumbling and churning]
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    The whole instrument is played
    by the sort of instability of
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    this boundary, and it's
    different every time I go.
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    When I talk about trying to
    cultivate the right state of
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    mind, that's one of the
    things I'm trying to get to --
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    to be somewhere that
    isn't a hard edge.
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    ♪wonky single
    notes playing♪
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    ♪wonky organ music playing♪
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    -[Tauba] I think
    that sounds good too.
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    What do you think of how
    long I hold that note there?
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    -[Cameron]I think that was good.
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    But I did think that the
    timing was a little...
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    -iffy.
    -[Tauba] Wonky?
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    -[Cameron] On that one.
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    -[Tauba] Mm-hm.
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    -[Tauba VO] The Auerglass is a
    two-person interdependent pump
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    organ that I made with my
    friend Cameron Mesirow,
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    who performs under
    the name Glasser,
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    and so it's A-U-E-R, glass.
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    ♪Auerglass playing♪
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    The Auerglass started when
    Cameron and I decided we wanted
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    to make an instrument that
    required cooperation between two
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    people to play.
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    ♪♪♪
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    Each player only
    has half a keyboard,
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    so there's a four-octave
    keyboard that's been divided up
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    between the two sides
    in alternating notes --
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    one has C, the next
    one C sharp, et cetera.
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    ♪♪♪
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    Each player pumps air for
    the other player's notes.
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    Cameron's way of putting it is
    that we have to breathe for one another.
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    [cheers and applause]
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    ♪Auerglass playing♪
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    Playing the Auerglass feels
    just barely not impossible.
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    The instrument has this quality
    of near-symmetry but just off by
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    a click that feels like a
    really activating relationship.
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    -It's hard!
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    -Yeah, it's hard.
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    [cheers and applause]
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    -[Tauba VO] It's great when
    we achieve that synchronicity,
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    but I feel like the times when
    we fumble in our performances,
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    I end up being
    really fond of them.
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    ♪Auerglass playing♪
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    I do a lot of drawings that
    involve this knit structure,
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    and I often figuratively lose
    the thread when I'm drawing,
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    I lose the rhythm.
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    They're really
    fast, spontaneous work.
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    And then sometimes, I get kind
    of fixated on completing one
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    long connected form that has a
    set of changing rules to it.
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    It's almost impossible not to
    go into a kind of trance state.
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    ♪Auerglass playing♪
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    Often, when I'm
    drawing, I ask myself,
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    "Can I move from the wrist?
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    Can I move from the
    fingers, from the elbow,
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    from the shoulder, from
    the center of my chest?"
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    ♪♪♪
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    I feel like a better
    thinker when I draw.
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    There's so much wisdom embedded
    in techniques and procedures for
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    crafts passed from
    person to person.
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    I think that if you're a person
    who marbles end papers for books
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    for decades, you
    know just as much
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    about viscosity and
    flow as a scientist.
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    But you know it through your
    fingertips and your senses,
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    and in a different way.
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    ♪♪♪
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    The body is a
    valuable thinking tool.
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    In the past, I was really moving
    through the world from my head
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    primarily.
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    But now, the enterprise
    is more about trust,
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    and a change for me in the last
    decade is to draw on my own body
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    for knowledge.
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    ♪♪♪
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    [cheers and applause]
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    ♪ ethereal ambient music ♪
Title:
Tauba Auerbach in "Bodies of Knowledge" - Season 11 | Art21
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"Art in the Twenty-First Century" broadcast series
Duration:
13:56

English subtitles

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