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Arturo Herrara in "Play" - Season 3 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21

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    ARTURO HERRERA:
    Collage is something
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    that you could do very inexpensively.
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    When I started I had no space.
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    You know uh, money was tight 
    and so this allowed me to,
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    to move forward without the elements
    that are required like canvases, brushes.
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    You need Xacto blade, scissors, 
    uh, glue and, and paper.
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    It was accessible, it was 
    uh, in the studio and um,
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    you could actually do it on a 
    table with very little resources.
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    This pile had been added for many years.
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    When one thing was uh,
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    at the beginning easily 
    recognizable as a foot or as a hat,
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    now it’s just become just a shape of color.
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    You have the, in the pile of 
    fragments there is huge variety,
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    handmade and also found.
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    This is from one of my 
    drawings from a printed book.
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    Here is paper from coloring books.
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    This is a water color shape, 
    acrylic on paper, crayon and ink,
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    construction paper, printed paper.
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    Finger painting or paint 
    directly applied from the tube.
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    Uh, crayon also.
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    Marbleized paper.
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    Paint-by-numbers found in a secondhand shop,
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    here you see is very old.
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    And I’m interested in how can an 
    image that is so well composed
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    and it’s so clear and it’s so objective uh,
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    it’s made out of this disparate fragments.
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    Glued, forced to be together to create uh,
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    image that will have a different reading from
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    what the fragments you know uh, say.
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    Structure is a preoccupation of mine.
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    I’m always looking for something 
    that will hold the image into place.
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    What I want to create is basically an image
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    that has you know aesthetic 
    and also this conceptual power.
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    The world of cartoons and animation 
    is now a universal language.
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    And I think everybody has specific memories
    to specific characters uh, or stories.
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    The idea of memory with images 
    of childhood or images of uh,
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    that are represented in the, you know,
    pop culture are as important as any other image.
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    So people seem to have very 
    strong attachments to those.
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    I think being Latin American you’re,
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    you’re made up of so many 
    fragments from different cultures.
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    Being from Venezuela you are a mixture of things.
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    I mean you’re both uh, from the region
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    and you’re also North American, 
    South American, Central American.
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    So you’re American.
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    And being there you know that you’re 
    part of the European tradition
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    and the American tradition.
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    It was totally uh, natural for 
    us to shift from you know uh,
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    from going from a European film to uh,
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    a samba concert, uh,
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    from a Walt Disney cartoon 
    festival to uh, to folk…
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    folkloristic dancing from Venezuela.
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    So it was all very natural.
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    It was a, it was never any kind of division about
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    what consisted in high culture or low culture.
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    So we, I think everybody in 
    Latin America takes everything
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    because you know that you 
    are just a mixture of things.
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    Moving to a new country and 
    now living in Berlin is, uh,
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    allows you to uh, try new things.
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    The beginning when I moved here was difficult,
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    because I wanted to keep working with the same,
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    at the same rhythm as I was working in New York.
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    Producing, producing, working, 
    producing without thinking too much.
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    And here it’s the other, it’s the opposite way.
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    There’s more time to think, there’s more 
    time to reflect on what you’re doing.
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    I trying to use the camera lens as a,
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    as a blade that cuts rectangular 
    fragments from my own drawings.
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    And then once the roll is done,
    then I put it into water.
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    And that’s what another 
    much, much more specific uh,
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    way of chance happens.
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    And um, the way the water slips into the film
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    and if it’s hot water or cold or 
    coffee or you know, with ice cubes,
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    then that will effect the emulsion on the film.
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    It’s interesting to me after I 
    did the photographs is that um,
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    images that I thought that were already finished
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    and that paper form and its collages 
    have a complete different life now.
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    Life is made of just connecting things.
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    We’re not really clear 
    about why we connect things.
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    Our emotional life is you know 
    a very important part of this.
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    And I think that memory is also a very 
    important part of this and desire.
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    So when looking at visual images,
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    you could actually be 
    informed by association only.
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    It’s satisfying to see them for 
    the first time up on the wall.
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    And the whole tone quality 
    is almost like graphite.
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    It’s almost like drawing.
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    Usually photography is so much about 
    perfect blacks and whites and uh,
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    these are really about perfect grays.
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    So I’m interested in this kind 
    of ambiguity about the images.
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    And they’re clearly based on fragments
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    and they’re being juxtaposed as 
    opposed to being forced to be together.
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    And yet they’re just abstractions.
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    I think there is a potential 
    for these images to communicate
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    different things to different viewers uh,
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    in a very touching way. Uh, but that 
    experience is not a public experiences,
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    it’s a very, very private
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    and it’s very, very personal.
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    My interest in wall paintings is that
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    it takes the imagery to a larger scale
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    and provides a different kind 
    of impact for the viewer.
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    Well this is the template for the 
    painter who executed the wall painting.
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    The drawing is to scale.
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    Every shape has been identified with a color.
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    The numbers correspond to the Pantone colors.
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    Any paint stored will be able to reproduce them.
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    The wall painter will uh, transfer 
    these lines onto the wall directly.
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    And then he will just follow the 
    template to paint color by color.
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    It’s a little bit peculiar 
    because the final result,
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    you really have no idea 
    until you are finished there.
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    I tend to take into consideration the 
    space where the paintings will be placed.
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    The wall painting for the museum 
    in Santiago de Compostela,
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    it’s a different set of circumstances
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    because the architecture is very prominent.
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    Never done this before where 
    an image has uh, could see the…
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    only be seen from the upper galleries
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    and then you can actually go 
    down and see it from, from below.
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    Uh, so it’s an interesting challenge and uh,
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    the image is, comes from one of the collages uh,
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    and it’s going to be done by a professional, uh,
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    sign painter of movie posters uh, from Madrid.
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    What I’m working on right now is trying 
    to give very simple instructions,
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    preliminary instructions to the painter.
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    So it actually helps to have this 
    file here to be able to think
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    and reconsider different aspects,
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    to tell the painter what to do exactly
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    because I’m not going to be there 
    when he executes this piece.
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    I have never done a piece that is in a 
    space that is actually dissected like this,
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    and with two unusual elements in it 
    which is a window door on the wall,
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    where the wall painting will be executed
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    and then a bridge that connects 
    the galleries into that window.
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    So I don’t know what the effect will be
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    and so I’m hoping that all the 
    elements and the imagery itself
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    will also convey some kind of 
    connection with the architecture.
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    Santiago is such an important 
    place for pilgrimage.
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    There is so much history there.
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    But the museum is very close to the cathedral.
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    So it’s a very charged city.
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    The wall painting actually has 
    these references to movement,
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    upwards or downward,
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    which is interesting to me because in Santiago,
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    people come with lots of 
    hopes and ideas, memories.
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    They go there looking for something which,
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    in a sense, it’s a very spiritual connection.
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    That maybe is what allowed me to take that image
    and to bring it into Santiago.
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    I think it’s still potential 
    for abstraction to become
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    a viable language of visual communication.
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    The same thing with collage.
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    I think we need to explore 
    what else they could do.
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    Going to continue, see what I could 
    say with this, with this language.
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    The longer you work a thing the more 
    possibilities you have of creating something.
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    It just comes through,
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    at least with my case it doesn’t come through uh,
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    divine touch, it just comes through just work.
Title:
Arturo Herrara in "Play" - Season 3 - "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:
13:57

English (United States) subtitles

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