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[Andrea Zittel: Art & Design]
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Joshua Tree is sort of unique;
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it's two and a half hours from Los Angeles,
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but on the edge of open desert.
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So if you continue driving to the East,
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it just completely opens up.
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And everyone here kind of comes from somewhere
else.
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I've been at Joshua Tree for fourteen years.
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I wanted to live in a community that was outside
of the art world.
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I really think that design should talk about
life and living.
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It's really sort of interesting talking about
design, but through art.
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Every space that I've lived in, I've turned
into an art project.
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And, I think that everything in the house
has really evolved with my life.
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The original part of the house is the kitchen.
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And then on the back side of the kitchen,
there's a bedroom.
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And then when I bought it, I ended up adding
the room that we're standing in--
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this used to be the driveway--
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and a bedroom for my son.
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There's like this other question that I ask
myself that comes up a lot too,
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and it's like that question of why to be an
artist and not a designer.
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I remember thinking that if an art historian,
like, a hundred years from now
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had to talk about my generation,
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that it would be almost impossible to talk
about it
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in, sort of, a significant cultural sense
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without touching on what was going on in design
at the same time.
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There's this, kind of, privileged position
of being an artist
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where you can do things on a more experimental
nature
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simply to see what happens.
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You know, we have to order so many materials
out here--
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we can't just go out and buy them.
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And all these cardboard boxes would come in.
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And for a while, I just stacking the cardboard
boxes on the wall
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and putting things in them,
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and thinking about how I could actually turn
them into,
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like, some sort of more permanent structure.
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I think that the ambiguity of how things are
meant to be used is deliberate,
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and I think it becomes one of the more interesting
parts of the work.
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I think it's really interesting if somebody
has one of these in their house,
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they're going to decide if they want to keep
it pristine,
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sort of like a Donald Judd sculpture;
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or, if they want to start piling it up with
books
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and stones that they find on trips and stuff
like that.
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These are some of my favorite works and, I
mean,
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it comes back to the grid.
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And, I think that the grid is representative
of human aspirations.
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I mean, everything is based on the grid--
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the calendar, our schedules.
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You know, it's about human perfection.
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I love the tension where, like, this is trying
to be perfect--
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and when we make them, we try and make them
really perfect,
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but they just don't want to be.
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I did two really big exhibitions of weaving.
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Weaving, I had always thought about conceptually
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because it's the grid.
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They really seem like they have a lot of imperfections,
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which is part of the reason that they're so
interesting.
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We decided to do a really really big weaving.
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We did a bunch of smaller ones and got really
confident.
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[LAUGHS]
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Maybe artificially confident.
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But, like, in the process, we're having a
lot of problems with the warp.
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[ZITTEL, OFF SCREEN] I hope somebody will
be watching this, who will, like...
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"Yeah, oh those idiots, they shouldn't have
done..."
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[WOMAN] "I can't believe they're doing that!"
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[ZITTEL] Yeah.
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[WOMAN] Maybe they'll write in.
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[ZITTEL] They'll tell us what to do.
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[WOMAN] Exactly!
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[ZITTEL] It'll be awesome.
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[WOMAN] Email us!
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[ZITTEL] The warp is getting really uneven
and stretched out,
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and so that's why we have all these blocks
of wood
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and pieces of rocks hanging from it.
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For the last few years, I've been working
with the idea of a panel,
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and trying to find the intersection between
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a very subtle, minimal object that's both
fine art and design.
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You could say that design has power,
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because it actually touches people in a much
more concrete way;
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but, I think that art has more wiggle room
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and more flexibility.
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And maybe I am as interested in failure as
I am in success.