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MIKE KELLEY: Right now I'm working
on about the 30th tape
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in a projected series of 365.
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And so it's supposed to be one
tape for every day of the year.
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[ rhythmic drumming and clapping ]
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[ women squeal ]
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[ rhythmic drumming and clapping ]
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I... I knew by the time
I was a teenager
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that I was going
to be an artist.
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There was no doubt about that.
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There was nothing else
for me to be.
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I think coming out
of Catholicism,
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I have a real interest
in ritual.
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I mean, ritual is beautiful,
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but I never was a believer.
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Yet...
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I think my interest in art
all along has been
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in trying to develop a kind
of materialist ritual.
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And I see all art as being
a kind of materialist ritual.
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When I first started working
with stuffed animals,
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I was responding to the... a lot
of the dialogue in the '80s
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about commodity culture.
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But I was really surprised
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that when everybody looked
at these works I made,
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they all thought
it was about child abuse.
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Now, that wasn't anything
I expected
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and not only did they think
it was about child abuse,
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they thought it was
about my abuse.
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So I said, well,
that's really interesting.
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I have to go with that.
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I have to make all my work
about my abuse,
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and not only that--
about everybody's abuse,
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like that this
is our shared culture.
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This is the presumption
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that all motivation is based on some kind
of repressed trauma.
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My work is very reactive.
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I'd make something,
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I get a response
that I'm not...
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I... I had no idea
I was going to get--
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I don't reject it; I embrace it.
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I run with it,
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you know. That tells me what to do.
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I decided to go back
to my originating trauma,
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which was my student training,
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and so I took all these drawings
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that I did in college
as an undergraduate
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which are perversions
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of Hoffmanesque
compositional principles,
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and I relearned
to paint that way.
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And I did this series.
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This is the first series
of paintings I did
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in this regressive manner.
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They're called
"The Thirteen Seasons."
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They're oval-- I broke
from the rectangular form
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because the oval, again,
has no end.
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And so it's eternal.
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It's eternally recurring abuse.
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In this kind
of trauma literature,
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the parts you can't remember
is called "missing time"
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and then you recover it.
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Because I work so much
with various kinds of tropes--
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and they're image tropes
or music tropes
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or performative tropes--
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it interests me to try
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to bring them into my system
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in certain ways, you know,
incorporate them.
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It's part of this whole process
of working through things.
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Things start simple
and get more complex.
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Sense always comes
after the fact in my work--
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to make it, at first glance,
acceptable,
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like I've seen some of that
before or I understand that.
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So it has to operate
on multiple levels.
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It has to be available
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to the laziest viewer
on a certain level...
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and then on a more sophisticated
viewer as well.
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I think what I make
is beautiful.
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I think it's beautiful,
because terms are confused
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and divisions between categories
start to slip.
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And that produces, um... what
I think is a sublime effect,
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or it produces humor,
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and both things interest me.
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And I... I...
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I guess I'm interested in a kind of
sublime play or sublime humor.
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—Well, behind... behind...
behind the mule is a man
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and then the fake horse.
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—Oh, that's better.
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That's even better.
—Yeah.
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You got a man in there to fill
up the gap-- that's better.
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—The man is
the pitchfork demon?
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KELLEY:
It's the pitchfork guy.
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—Stan? It's Stan,
if you could get him.
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—Yeah.
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—And tell him not to swing
his pitchfork around.
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—Yeah, do something
like that.
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Stomp, stomp, stomp.
—Come on in.
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[ whinnies ]
And then go.
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KELLEY:
"Day is Done"-- the project
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I'm working on right now--
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is kind of built around a mythos
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that relates to
an earlier sculpture I did
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called "The Educational Complex," which is
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a model of every school
I ever went to
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plus the home I grew up in,
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with all the parts
I can't remember left blank.
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—I think I want to try it
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when these cheerleaders
get to about here,
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to give me a big scream,
you know like, "Whoa!"
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Like that's the most wonderful
thing you've ever seen.
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—The audience should do a big scream?
—Yeah.
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—Should they raise
their arms like that?
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—No, no, just... just...
well, let me...
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I don't know, let me see it.
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Let's hear a big "Wha!"
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ALL:
Whoo!
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—Yeah, arms is good.
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Lift the arms up. Whoa!
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ALL:
Whoa!
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[ drum cadence playing ]
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—Action.
—Action.
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[ drum cadence playing ]
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KELLEY:
All these
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videos are based
on high school yearbooks.
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It's not because
I have any interest
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in high school
or high school culture,
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but it's one of the few places
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where you can find photographs
of these kinds of rituals.
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—WOMAN:Cut.
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Stand this way
a little bit.
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Yeah, let's go for it.
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MAN:
Okay.
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It's really close.
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It won't be the same.
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Okay, it's fine.
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The... the image is the same.
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MAN:
The image is...
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KELLEY:
The relationships
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are the same.
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Almost all of this comes
from writing,
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and...
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and then later
I tried to say, well,
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how can it be
visually interesting?
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It has narrative elements, but it's... it's not
straight narrative.
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KELLEY:Cut.
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[ laughs ]
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WOMAN:
Good job, Stan.
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All the writing is...
is associative,
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and it comes
from my own experience, but
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it's very hard to,
say, to disentangle memories
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of films or books or cartoons
or plays from "real experience."
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It all gets mixed up.
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So in a way I don't make
such distinctions.
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And I see it all
as a kind of fiction.
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—I can't walk by myself.
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I'm not responsible.
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KELLEY:
When I was younger,
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all my writing was generated
for performance work.
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—I'm the sailor, but I don't have
sea legs, sea legs.
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But I don't walk
and I don't talk.
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[ whistles ]
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So this project is
very much a way for me
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to get back into writing and--
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because I don't have the time
just to do it.
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I have to work it
into my work somehow.
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It's like music.
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I didn't have time
to play music anymore,
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so I had to make a project
where I had...
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that had to have music in it, so
I forced myself to make music.
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[ Kelley playing eerie melody
on electric organ ]
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KELLEY:
Never had any musical training.
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I grew up in a household where there was really
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very little interest in music, and
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they didn't teach music
in school.
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And, uh... I
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grew up on rock and
roll music, and all
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the musicians I knew
were self-taught.
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I've been playing noise music
for many, many years.
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But this project's
really different
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because this is like
no other music I've ever done,
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because it's all based
on really,
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uh... typical forms, but
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I know enough about that
where I can fake it.
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And, I mean, I don't know what I'm doing.
Say, I can't say, oh, that's this chord
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or that's this note,
but I know what it sounds like.
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And so we can piece it
all together
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and it's believable.
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—Am I going to hear
the, uh...
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the...
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orchestra sample too?
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—MAN: Uh, yeah, you'll hear,
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you'll hear
what you just did.
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—Okay.
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—Here we go.
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KELLEY:
With the computer,
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we can do everything ourself.
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We don't need to get
an orchestra;
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we can...
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do all the editing here.
We can make films by ourselves.
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[ cymbals resonating ]
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[ drum cadence playing ]
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ALL:
Whoo!
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[ drum cadence playing ]
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KELLEY:
My dream is to perform it live.
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MAN:
Let the final procession begin.
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KELLEY:
So that
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the whole thing
is performed
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like, say, in a 24-hour period,
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so the day stands for the year.
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[ drum cadence continues ]
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It's very much
like a passion play.
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Though a somewhat formalized
and ridiculous passion play, though its
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its ridiculousness
is purposeful.
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CAST ( harmonizing ):
♪ Mary...♪ ♪ Mary...♪
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♪ Mary...♪
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♪ Mary...♪
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♪ Mary...♪
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♪ Mary...♪
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♪ Mary...♪
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KELLEY:
I think that's
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the joyfulness of it.
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But then it's a black humor;
it's a mean humor,
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so it's a critical joy.
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It's, you know...
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it's negative joy.
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[ laughs ]
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But that's art, I think,
you know, for me at least.
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That's what separates it
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from the folk art
that I'm going to--that
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I still think
the social function of art
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is that kind of...
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negative aesthetic.
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Otherwise there's
no social function for it.
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[ women squealing ]
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[ upbeat jazzy music playing ]