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[Julie Mehretu: Politicized Landscapes]
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There is no such thing as just "landscape".
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The actual landscape is politicized through
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the events that take place on it.
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And I don't think it's possible for me,
in general,
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to ever think about the American landscape
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without thinking about the colonial history--
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and the colonial violence--
of that narrative.
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The abolitionist movement.
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The Civil War.
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The move towards emancipation.
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All of these social dynamics that are
part of that narrative,
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we don't really talk about in regards to
American landscape paintings.
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And so, what does it mean to paint a landscape
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and try and be an artist
in this political moment?
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The color in these paintings
really came out of
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blurred photographs that were
embedded inside of the underpaintings.
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The sirens and the flames of race riots
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was a way to embed the paintings with DNA
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so that I could respond from a deeper place.
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--I'm going to go upstairs and take a look.
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--Yeah, I'm excited!
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[LAUGHS]
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Marian Goodman contacted me,
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telling me that SFMOMA was interested
in doing this commission
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before the new museum opened.
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I went several times to San Francisco
to visit the museum.
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I was there, staring at this
very cavernous, open space--
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at these two walls.
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And I started to think about
the national parks
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and the representations of
American landscape painting.
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And, specifically, when I came back,
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I kept thinking about the
Hudson River Valley School painters,
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like Edwin Church,
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Thomas Cole,
Bierstadt--
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because they really encapsulate that idea
of going westward.
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I started to layer the blurred color images
into these historic landscape paintings.
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Just prior to emancipation,
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Native Americans of the Sierras
and the western frontiers were
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completely annihilated by this
expansionist project.
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What was interesting was that aspect of
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both annihilation and then
preservation shortly after
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can exist on the same geographic landscape.
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San Francisco then, as a site,
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became important because that was
this destiny of going out west.
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[Jason Moran, composer and pianist]
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--[MEHRETU] How are you doing?
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Jason Moran wrote me after seeing some paintings
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and he talked about them as a score.
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And I was super interested in that.
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And so we started working together here
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in a very, very loose and open way.
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It's kind of an amazing thing to paint
in a church.
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Everything kind of reverberates
back into here,
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energy-wise--
consciousness-wise--
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and everything that has taken place
this year in my personal life,
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with my children,
with what has happened politically.
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All of that is immersed in these paintings.
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[Electric piano plays]
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All of these brutal killings of Black people
in this country--
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and the Black body.
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The Trump-Hillary dynamic,
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it was disgusting to witness.
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There was something in that language
that's visceral.
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When a person speaks so horrifically towards
another being,
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that's deeply wrenching.
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The discomfort of being a person
living and working in the United States
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is a place that, I think, these paintings
were being made from.
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[Electric piano plays]
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[JASON MORAN] Every room defines one tone,
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and it's like the room tone.
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It's the tone that makes it resonate.
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And I started to find some of that
in the note A-flat.
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I started to build around that,
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and then, every once in a while,
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look up and see where Julie was in her work.
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Then slowly, I started to look at
my sheet of paper
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not as a place that had a start and a finish,
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but that all of it could be composed on
different moments.
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--I made a little section where
you were taking stuff away.
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[LAUGHS]
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--I made you a little part that's like,
"I'm taking this away."
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[MEHRETU LAUGHS]
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[MORAN] America is a country still in the
adolescent stage.
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It doesn't know how to deal with its emotions.
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[LAUGHS]
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It doesn't know how to deal with its history.
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It doesn't want to dig in the ground to know
what artifacts are under it.
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And so, jazz, I always say,
has been that form of music
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that's been the model of letting people
know what's happening.
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It's always been like that.
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[Electric piano plays]
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And so we recorded the music because
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we should document the moment
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and also share the moment, too.
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[MEHRETU] I really try to think about
painting in terms of
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the construction or making of an image.
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Dealing with things that
we don't have proper language for.
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I kind of start to think of them as
these visual neologisms.
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The neologism is there to address
when language isn't enough.
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Through repetition of the mark,
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there's this desire of trying
to invent something.
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At a certain point, I wanted to bring
elements of the underpainting to the surface,
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so that it further complicated, spatially,
how you were seeing these.
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When you're looking at these paintings,
they're not graspable.
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There are moments where they reference
Renaissance Ascension painting,
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and then other moments that feel digitized.
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At least for me,
they're not something I feel like
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I can give any kind of articulation
of what's happening fully.
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[Jazz music plays]
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I love California.
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There's this grandeur to the coast
and the way the coast reaches the ocean.
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When you're driving through the Bay Area,
it's just majestic.
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[San Francisco Museum of Modern Art]
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I feel like I have a hundred other paintings
I want to make,
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because I've learned so much in making these.
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I'm not going to try and take a break
or stop working.
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There's a lot of creative momentum
in finishing these paintings.
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[Clapping and cheering]
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I have a lot of ideas that I want to investigate
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and I'm excited about that.