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Mouth-Operated Pinhole Cameras, Bubbles, and more (Ann Hamilton) | Art21

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    I've always felt a strong
    connection between sewing
    thread and writing thread.
    (charcoal scraping)
    (sewing machine)
    I grew up doing hand work,
    needle work, sewing, knitting,
    embroidery, all those textile
    arts. The process is satisfying,
    but cloth metaphors are beautiful.
    Every cloth is made of threads,
    whatever their weave. Each one
    is visible, and the whole cloth
    needs each one. It's a social
    metaphor to me. It's beautiful.
    My first graduate school piece:
    a gray suit covered in toothpicks,
    the cloth skin like a hide,
    a porcupine. (music)
    (whispering) Find the linear
    broken below a human.
    For me, the thread, written line,
    and drawn line are about making.
    (whispering) The line that makes
    something relates to how we make
    things with language. (whispering)
    Certainty. I work with words
    as materials, like others.
    "Lineament" is from a Wallace
    Stevens poem. The page becomes
    three-dimensional. Each line
    is lifted like a thread, run
    through hands, creating a ball,
    the page's body. I see the tie
    of thread as line and writing.
    Yeah. Now go that way. Right.
    (crinkling plastic) I'll set up
    the pipes, then we'll bring
    the fabric over. For me,
    installation is working in
    relation to a place. You're
    animating the space. You don't
    know what it will do to you,
    or you to it. (laughs) You try
    to be blank, pay attention,
    what comes up, what you feel.
    Your skin is a smart organ,
    a membrane. You walk through
    any threshold and smell, feel
    temperature and light, all
    influences. (birds chirping)
    This building had people working
    here. It's in a company town,
    forgotten. It went out of
    business three months ago.
    (whispering) I didn't visit it
    in operation, as a textile
    factory, now silenced. The
    hollowness, emptiness, was
    palpable. I'm all thumbs today.
    (indistinct) Grab this string?
    I wanted one room for the writer,
    one for the reader. They're
    ghost-like silk organza, side
    by side, identical, foot
    square, suspended. (clanging)
    Yeah. Hey Emmitt, carry this
    over with the other pipes?
    He can do it. Don't worry.
    There you go. Each room has
    a foot table, a spinning
    projector. (clanging) With
    Anne's work. She's not a
    traditional artist, painting
    or sculpture. People have to
    reach, break expectations.
    It says there's more here
    than we saw. Someone else
    sees that. Emmitt, help pull
    the projector. Okay? This is
    the video going backwards.
    Pencils eating the line.
    (whooshing) Making work is
    allowing things already there,
    but not visible, to become
    visible, experience-able.
    (whooshing) (crickets) (bells)
    (whispering) (birds) This
    Jeffersonian building is an
    emblem of American ideals.
    (women speaking code) I wanted
    to engage it. How do we deal
    with our history's stains?
    Our social history, slavery,
    is the largest. A democratic
    country founded on slavery,
    how to talk about that?
    Abstractly, perhaps. Chromed
    fusca powder sifted down,
    catching on plaster dots,
    spelling braille, edited from
    Resnikoff's poems. Each room
    had Lincoln's address, a healing
    one, in phonetic alphabet.
    (Women whispering code)
    (birds) (door opening/closing)
    Come on, Timmy. Let's go.
    (leash clanking) I live in Ohio,
    moved back after teaching
    seven years in Santa Barbara.
    I want to be near family.
    This is where I grew up.
    (geese) Comfort to come home.
    My parents helped a lot. Mom
    would fly out for projects,
    Dad helped. Now they provide
    backup, allowing my travel.
    It would be harder without it.
    Help change the film? You can't
    be a mom with a kindergartner
    without help. Emmitt, see your
    picture? (clicking) My work
    gives voice, but not my voice.
    Mine is here and here. How do
    I make where song and words
    exit the body become my eye?
    I made pinhole cameras, put one
    in my mouth, unblock it, expose
    the film. (footsteps) You're not
    supposed to have your mouth open.
    (laughs) It's vulnerable, relaxed,
    open. (laughs) Sorry. Ready?
    Um-hm. Um. Interesting to
    register stillness, face to
    face, soul to soul, revealing
    something not surface stuff.
    Mouth and eye are the same.
    The image is like the pupil.
    (bell) (barking) Good. Invert
    senses. These slippages make
    us see differently. (motor)
    Looks like fire off your hand.
    Wow. Magic. Flat water with
    soap, of human hair's thickness.
    Things that thin reflect light
    depending on thickness. I
    wondered if Ann could use it.
    Which is the problem. Martin
    said, "I'm doing this," showed
    it. I don't know how or when,
    but it's related to everything
    I've done. The cloth's fluidity,
    hands through its membrane.
    I love the bubble, breath made
    visible. Beautiful. I know
    making work, I can't see it,
    then there's a moment I can,
    think it's beautiful. It bites,
    you try to see it. (laughs)
    Of course it's different.
    (music)
Title:
Mouth-Operated Pinhole Cameras, Bubbles, and more (Ann Hamilton) | Art21
Description:

Art21 proudly presents an artist segment, featuring Anne Hamilton, from the "Spirituality" episode in Season 1 of the "Art in the Twenty-First Century" series.

"Spirituality" premiered in September 2001 on PBS.

Whether working with sculpture, textiles, film, and sound, or even her unique mouth-operated pinhole cameras, Ann Hamilton finds all her art to be about a “very fundamental act of making.”

Ann Hamilton was born in 1956 in Lima, Ohio. Learn more about the artist at: https://art21.org/artist/ann-hamilton.

CREDITS
Created by: Susan Sollins & Susan Dowling. Executive Producer & Curator: Susan Sollins. Executive Producer: Susan Dowling. Series Producer: Eve-Laure Moros Ortega. Associate Producer: Migs Wright. Production Coordinator: Laura Recht. Researcher: Quinn Latimer & Wesley Miller. Director: Deborah Shaffer. Editor: Kate Taverna. Director of Photography: Bob Elfstrom, Ken Kobland, Joel Shapiro, & Dyanna Taylor. Additional Photography: Chip Nusbaum & Anita Sieff. Assistant Camera: Ulli Bonnekamp, John Griffiths, Glen Piegari, Kipjaz Savoie, & Ben Wolf. Sound: Ray Day, John Fintel, Alan Sawyer, Scott Szabo, J.T. Takagi, & Eric Williams. Gaffer/Grip: Steve Carrillo, Kent Eanes, Dennis Hollyfield, Greg Szabo, & Lieven Van Hulle. Production Assistant: Mark Chevarria, Anya Dehr-Turrell, Chris Dowling, Heather Glass, Melissa Morgan, & Erin Wile. Animation Stand Photographer: Marcos Levy & City Lights. Assistant Avid Editor: Heather Burak & Matt Prinzig.

Full credits available at https://art21.org/watch/art-in-the-twenty-first-century/s1/spirituality

Major underwriting for Season 1 of Art in the Twenty-First Century is provided by Robert Lehman Foundation, PBS, National Endowment for the Arts, Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Rockefeller Brothers Fund, Agnes Gund and Daniel Shapiro, The Allen Foundation for the Arts, The Broad Art Foundation, The Jon and Mary Shirley Foundation, Bagley Wright Fund, The Rockefeller Foundation, The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, and The Foundation-to-Life.

#AnnHamilton #Spirituality #Art21

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"Art in the Twenty-First Century" broadcast series
Duration:
15:59

English subtitles

Incomplete

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