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Hiwa K in "Berlin" - Season 9 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21

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    Hiwa K: People tend to forget,
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    this amnesia which people are having, especially 
    now with the return of the right wing.
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    Sometimes artists work more into the 
    future and show them what could come.
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    But sometimes you have to remind them 
    just what happened yesterday, you know,
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    because people tend to forget more and more.
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    Baruther Strasse is the name of my street.
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    I go to the studio here. “Barut” 
    in Arabic means explosive powder.
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    Anything I do is an archeological act.
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    You start to dig, and the material 
    starts to tell you who you are.
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    The material tells you, "Okay,
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    you are doing quite well. I like you 
    like this. Go further. Stop here."
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    You play and you test your borders 
    as a small Chihuahua, or dog.
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    You try to see who is the master and 
    the material always talks to you.
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    Mostly, I take my works from 
    anecdotes, like my own childhood.
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    I was born Kurdistan of Iraq. Kurdistan is 
    a minority in Iraq. Color TVs didn't come
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    to Kurdistan, because the government's not 
    investing always in those minority areas.
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    So my father was putting color foil on the TV.
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    One week we had it red, one week we had blue.
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    The whole city was doing that. 
    It's a very silent protest.
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    I think my works are very Kurdish.
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    Kurds is about being formless, 
    because you don't have a country.
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    You exist but you don't 
    exist on the map officially.
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    After the first World War, the French and the 
    British decided not to give the Kurds a country.
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    They gave a part to Iraq, to Iran, 
    to Syria, and then to Turkey.
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    So we are just cut in four pieces like pizza.
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    Yeah, as a Kurdish person, you are twice unsafe.
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    Like as Iraqi, you are unsafe once as Arab.
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    But when you are Kurdish, you are unsafe twice.
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    This work ["The Lemon Tastes of Apple"] happened
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    2011 when I went back to Kurdistan 
    and it was the time of Arab Spring.
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    I don't like to hide behind my camera.
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    To jump in front of your own camera, 
    you make yourself vulnerable,
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    and you are not looking at things 
    as an object, you are a part of it.
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    And this engagement is very important for me.
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    I say it was very stupid to do it, because I ...
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    I wouldn't do it now.
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    It was very dangerous moment where 
    you walked towards this militias
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    which are shooting you one by one and playing 
    Ennio Morricone’s music while inhaling the gas.
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    The absurdity of the whole thing, it's a big joke.
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    You brother is shooting you, 
    what do you have to lose.
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    You just have to do a gesture.
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    I’m using the mechanism of a joke.
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    You wouldn't expect somebody stupid 
    coming with a harmonica and playing.
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    You experience things differently 
    with a joke. It has a twist.
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    It has a way of stimulating your thinking.
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    A joke always wakes us up with a slap, 
    which comes from somewhere you don't expect.
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    I have very rational part of my practice, 
    but also have a very irrational part.
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    I want to bring something what doesn't fit; what 
    doesn't fit, and it's a bit strange, you know.
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    Since many years, I knew Bakir 
    Ali, the Kurdish philosopher,
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    was based in Berlin working as a taxi driver.
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    We had the long-term discussions in Kurdish.
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    I wanted to interrupt his thinking.
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    So I just started to attack him physically.
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    Wrestling interrupts us from this 
    kind of linear intellectual debate.
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    When we're out of breath and 
    somebody's holding your throat,
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    you can't verbalize what you want to say.
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    You sometimes experience the most existentialist questions.
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    Hiwa K:
    Very often,
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    people say, "You are visual artist." 
    I say, "I'm a blind visual artist."
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    I search blindly for tools.
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    I'm more like having a begging bowl and knocking 
    at doors, "Do you have anything to give me?"
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    I'm just borrowing disciplines from 
    dance to marble game to music to cooking.
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    They are the language of the people.
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    I think if art had some chance, it should 
    change completely this intellectual language.
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    When you are trying to balance 
    something, you are in a panic.
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    You are swinging all the time, you don't have 
    a center. You are not anchored somewhere.
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    So very often, people say I'm based in Berlin.
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    I'm never based. I'm based on my feet, you know.
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    I came walking.
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    I tried seven times to leave my country, and I was 
    even in a few prisons, because I didn't make it.
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    The wave of refugees itself is a statement.
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    It's a performance art actually, like people 
    are performing and coming here saying,
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    "You see what happens to me 
    because of your ignorance,
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    because of you not caring about the system."
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    I would be very happy to go back to my country,
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    because I want to spend some time with 
    my mountains, my people, but in peace.
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    And this peace, I say the 
    West has ruined it for us.
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    I remember we had always war. I don't 
    remember that there was no war in Iraq.
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    I went through three wars 
    before coming to the West.
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    During the second World War, Kassel was destroyed
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    and now Kassel is producing so 
    much weapons and exported many,
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    many weapons to my country and other countries.
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    Kassel is forgetting it's own past.
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    In Greece, there was a structure of five 
    water pipes to be used for construction.
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    Refugees are living there, so it was like 
    a kind of refugee camp or hotel for free.
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    It's not about patronizing, but 
    it's just about reminding people.
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    The refugee which we see, they come just 
    because you've export wars to those countries.
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    The works I do is very much about reminding 
    how many fingerprints we have onto each other,
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    how much we are embedded into each other.
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    Sometimes you call your work political, but by 
    overdosing it, you kill the political in it.
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    So, for me, it's important 
    to make this soft connection.
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    And here I call it to refer with 
    your pinky, not with your index.
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    Instead of telling all these white people,
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    "You guys, look what you are doing 
    to my family and people are dying."
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    No, make them get it by themselves.
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    I think it's our responsibility, 
    people from dominated countries,
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    educate them about politics. Educate 
    them about knowing about our pain.
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    The major changes should happen here,
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    because these countries are 
    countries who are in charge
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    of making big decisions about the whole world.
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    People here, they live quite 
    well and they don't care.
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    They don't want to change anything.
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    We are stuck somehow. I'm in a 
    quite stress situation for now.
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    Free thinking what I'm doing, whether 
    that's helpful or just decorating the
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    façade of the system with this democratic color.
Title:
Hiwa K in "Berlin" - Season 9 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"Art in the Twenty-First Century" broadcast series
Duration:
14:52

English subtitles

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