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["Barbara Kruger: Part of the Discourse"]
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How come any piece of canvas
with pigment on it
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gets to be called art?
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There are so many ways of making art,
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some of them more available
to a general public than others.
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I remember going to galleries
when I was young--
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totally intimidated!
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Certain works have to be decoded.
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I think the availability of my work
was important to me,
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because I was that viewer
who didn’t understand--
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who didn’t know the codes.
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Performa approached me,
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and the skatepark came up in conversation.
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I just go, "Oh that would be so cool."
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"Money talks."
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"Whose values?"
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These are just ideas in the air,
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and questions that we ask sometimes--
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and questions that we don’t ask
but should ask.
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I grew up in Newark, New Jersey.
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My mother and my father,
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neither of them have college degrees.
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We lived in a three-room apartment
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and I slept in the living room.
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I was always very aware of how
where we’re born,
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what we are given,
and what is withheld from us
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determines who we can be in the world.
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I came to New York.
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Went to Parson’s for a year.
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Started working as a billing clerk
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and then a telephone operator.
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Living in Newark and later New York,
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maybe you didn’t read the tabloids
but you saw them everyday
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in the subway and everywhere.
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All of a sudden,
I heard there were jobs at Condé Nast.
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I was lucky--
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I got hired as a second designer.
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If you didn’t get people
to look at those pages,
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you were fired.
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Cropping pictures.
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Choosing fonts.
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When I first started I thought,
"Oh I want to be art director,"
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but it was a different world.
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I was like a chimney sweep
compared to the other people who worked there.
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I really took time off
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and tried to figure out
what it might mean to call myself an artist.
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I remember saying to people,
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"Can I just be an artist by working with
pasteup and magic marker?"
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"No, you can’t do that."
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I realized I could use the fluencies
as a designer
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to make my work.
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I like fonts that cut through the grease--
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the, sort of, clarity
of those sans serif fonts.
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I felt that red capture one’s attention.
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In most cases, I could not afford to
print these images in color.
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I used to go to used bookstores
and find old magazines,
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and I converted them to black and white.
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For us, in 1981, '83,
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showing your work was about
being a part of the discourse.
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When my peer group first started being discussed,
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and our work was being sold,
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I thought, "Well if my work is developing
this commodity status, I had to address it."
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Issues about power, value,
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unfortunately do not grow old.
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Architecture is my first love.
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I just spatialize ideas.
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I know what areas to engage
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to activate a space
with images and with text.
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"Think like us."
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"Hate like us."
"Fear like us."
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I want my work to create commentary.
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[PROTESTOR]
--Right to life, your name’s a lie,
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--you don’t care if women die.
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[KRUGER] I made "Your body is a battleground"
to get people to go to the march.
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This was for women’s reproductive rights.
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I remember calling Planned Parenthood
and offering my services,
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and they didn’t know who the eff I was.
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They said, well they were
working with an advertising agency.
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Oh okay, alright.
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So I used this printer named Quirky.
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I used to print all these posters with him.
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I went out at one or two in the morning
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and put these posters up all over town.
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Well, of course I’m a feminist.
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But I have never been able to consider
gender or sexuality apart from class--
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and never thought of class apart from race.
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Something to really think about
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is what makes us who we are
in the world that we live in,
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and how culture constructs and contains us.
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There are stereotypes of the artist
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or of the musician.
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Those are the kinder stereotypes.
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People ask me all the time,
can they come to my studio?
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And I say, do you want me to put a beret on
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and you can photograph me with a big table?
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I said, no--
no.
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I just don’t want to be that person.
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There’s enough visual record of me.
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You don’t need a million pictures.
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What it means
to point a camera at another person,
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I think that there’s a brutality about that.
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"You."
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"You know that women have served
all these centuries"
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"as looking glasses possessing the magic
and delicious power"
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"of reflecting the figure of man at twice
its natural size."
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It’s a Virginia Woolf quote.
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I just had to use that.