-
Leonardo Drew:
When I get up in the morning, I know exactly
-
what I'm going to be doing.
-
I'll be working.
-
I don't know what the works are actually going
to be about,
-
but they find their way.
-
I was drawing and using colored inks and things
like that.
-
People in the neighborhood, the projects where
I grew up in Bridgeport, Connecticut,
-
they were telling me about this place called ABCD
Cultural Art Center.
-
They said that well you have to go there because
they have paints and canvases.
-
And I said, "Wow, this is all this stuff for
free?"
-
So once I made my way over to them, I ended
up with these mentors.
-
A fantastic group of artists who were just
there helping kids.
-
And I was one of them.
-
I was approached by DC Comics and Heavy Metal
magazine and Marvel Comics to, to do work
-
for them.
-
When I saw this black and white reproduction
of Jackson Pollock's work, when I was in the
-
library in high school, that was it.
-
And that was my first take on what fine art was.
-
Imagine Jackson Pollock in black and white,
but it still elicited such a visceral response
-
that when seeing it I was kind of like wow,
this is amazing.
-
From that point on, I began to question what
I was doing up against what I had seen and
-
what I had felt.
-
More actually what I had felt.
-
Probably would have been like fifteen.
-
I was still exhibiting a certain type of work,
but it had touches of what I had realized.
-
When it came time for me to go to college,
it was pretty easy to make a decision like,
-
okay, you could just do college or you use
your talents to go out and have a life or
-
make money.
-
It was pretty easy.
-
It was like, you go to the place where it's
going to get you closer to Jackson Pollock
-
I studied at Cooper Union.
-
I was probably the greediest person there
because I digested everything.
-
I mean, I was in the foundry, the woodshop.
-
You know, like making paper.
-
Photography.
-
And then I asked for an extra year.
-
I had to fight for it, but they gave it to
me. [laughs]
-
My ability to be able to draw and paint well
actually was getting in the way of me realizing
-
something larger.
-
It's hard to get past something so beautifully
done and then at the same time ask the question,
-
what's underneath that?
-
I decided it was time for me to stop using
what I did well.
-
So what I did was almost literally tied my
hands.
-
I said, okay, you can no longer paint or draw.
-
And you're going to have to find another way
to create.
-
This is where I would've stopped drawing actually,
-
this is where it ended.
-
It was like seven years before I made a breakthrough.
-
So from 1982 to 1989, took me seven years
of just experimenting.
-
This piece came out, which was "Number 8."
-
Animal parts, rope, string.
-
Everything that you can possibly imagine is
in this, all entangled in this one monster
-
of a piece.
-
It was made up of all the failures or at least
what I perceived as failures.
-
If you're a "Number 8,"" then that means there
is like 1 to 7 that are no longer there.
-
It's just like they were all a part of "Number 8."
-
One of the reasons why I actually number the
works is just to give the viewer enough room
-
to find themselves in the work.
-
The work should become a mirror.
-
There are three areas on this piece, of importance
that I should pay attention to.
-
So I can't place something here without knowing
what's going on over there.
-
So this tells this area what has to happen.
-
And that tells this what has to happen.
-
And then they speak to one another.
-
So I know there's a gradation going on.
-
For instance, that has a sweep you see.
-
"Boom."
-
By the time it reaches the bottom, this is
the top, it's going to be epic.
-
[laughs]
-
That way of creating is actually only a microcosm
of how I make things,
-
because when I'm working on this I'm paying attention to that.
-
And that's telling me what has to happen over
here too.
-
And I can see things that are not working
over there,
-
that I say, okay, make sure that that's not occurring here.
-
And then this helps me by saying, oh you know
what,
-
this needs that over there you know.
-
So a lot of times I can rip things out.
-
That piece actually is already made up of
at least four different pieces. Yeah.
-
And the longer the work hangs around, the
better off it is.
-
My number's usually seven.
-
I'm rotating seven things.
-
They're speaking to each other.
-
But it is sometimes like seven crying babies.
-
You're trying to get to this one, to that
one and you're bouncing around.
-
And then they leave.
-
I end up visiting these things in museums
or people's homes.
-
And on the whole, those people, those folks
-
or even security guards at museums end up knowing more about the works than I could
have,
-
because they're living with them
-
and they've had much longer amount of time to
experience them.
-
And I only have them for a second.
-
I remember making a piece in my apartment.
-
At the time I was living in Washington Heights.
-
A friend of mine came over and said, "Well
how are you going to get it out?".
-
I said, I hadn't thought of that that.
-
I wasn't really thinking about taking the
piece out of there.
-
I got smart enough to sort of at least break
these things up into like increments of 24" by 24"
-
plates so that when I do hang it, you
know at least if there was no help around, I could do it by myself.
-
Being a person of color is one of those things
that you know you will have to contend with
-
as an artist.
-
You're going to have to realize it and you're
going to have something to say.
-
When I actually did this show back in 1992,
there were things that sort of came out of
-
that exhibition, which I have not necessarily
returned to, but they have definitely been
-
things that people will probably continue
to remember and write about, even if the work
-
has absolutely at this point nothing to do
with cotton or ropes or things like that.
-
There's a huge cotton wall piece that I had done.
-
At the time I was using my friend Jack Whitten's
studio.
-
And I didn't have a car; I didn't even have
a license.
-
My goodness.
-
And Jack was living down on Lispenard...which
is behind Canal Street.
-
That's like, oh it's some almost thirty blocks.
-
[laughs]
-
So it's like, okay, I put the bale of cotton
on the dolly and pushed it in the street.
-
And I remember the photographs that came out
from that.
-
[laughs]
-
Outrageous.
-
For me, it was very practical to get from
A to B, but in fact, if you look at the photographs,
-
it's like a political statement.
-
Then from there it was like, okay, creating
the piece.
-
My people's history is not about just black
people.
-
It's about all of us.
-
I mean there were things in that exhibition
that went through my body that were huge.
-
In 1992, I got it all out.
-
It got said.
-
For me to just linger on that, it would be
almost doing the art a disservice.
-
[saw whirring]
-
I was there eleven years in a studio in San Antonio.
-
I was always going back and forth from New
York to San Antonio.
-
One of the issues that has consistently come
up when people write about the art
-
is that they talk about found objects.
-
Actually, I don't work with found objects.
-
Most of my material are actually created in
the studio,
-
so I actually go out and I buy material, brand new stuff.
-
I actually have become the weather.
-
My reasons for having a studio in San Antonio
had everything to do with the intensity of
-
the heat and how I could actually weather
some of the materials that I was working with.
-
But what I ended up doing was hoisting onto
the roof of the studio these
-
eight-foot cattle troughs.
-
Buy like six of them and I would cook the
materials, sometimes for months and years
-
depending on what it is I was after.
-
There is the artwork that you physically make,
but there's also the journey that happens
-
on the inside.
-
That body of work was emotionally heavy and
I just thought,
-
what would happen if you took that away?
-
Here we are again with this question.
-
We're comfortable, how do I get to the next place?
-
So when you get rid of all the things that
you find that are comfortable.
-
So I said, okay, get rid of the rust.
-
It was at that point that the Fabric Workshop
had asked me to come up with an idea for a
-
piece as I was asking that question.
-
And I said, what if I took just white paper--just
like Xerox paper, like
-
really sixteen-pound paper--and transform that into something.
-
What if I took objects and I wrapped the paper
around them
-
and then released them from the objects?
-
Boom, take a razor blade, you cut it away.
-
Boom, take the object out.
-
Boom, put it back together.
-
And there's nothing underneath the white paper.
-
Just the paper.
-
So it's just a shell in the end.
-
So you're getting really a ghost image.
-
What happened was revealing.
-
No matter what materials I end up using, once
you find your voice, that's it.
-
[sander grinding]
-
There is no escaping your past.
-
With certainty, absolute certainty I can look
back
-
on some of the configurations that I created
-
and I can see those projects. I can see the landfill.
-
We were right next to the dump.
-
I mean literally we could see the dump from
our window and we could see the tractors going
-
back and forth over the landfills.
-
That was what I knew.
-
I spent time at the dump.
-
I can see the grid for instance.
-
Interesting enough, people go on like, "Oh,
his connection is to minimalism."
-
I say actually it's more like
those gridded projects.
-
When you're creating, there are satisfying
moments and then there are
-
moments that are kind of like endpoints--or beginnings.
-
My gallery approached me, "What if we allowed
you to take on the space?""
-
I have the space for a month to actually create
in the space.
-
What I did was, as always, bought materials
like the wood and stuff like that and began
-
to wash it and burn it and transform it.
-
What we ended up with was this dilapidated
wall.
-
This thing was a one hundred and nine feet long.
-
And monstrous.
-
Just because something is big, bombastic,
and sensational
-
does not necessarily mean that it's successful.
-
It was like all of a sudden, I had this epiphany.
-
It is time for you to start reaching again.
-
This is not quite enough.
-
I know this too well and I'm getting too comfortable
again.
-
Now for the viewer, they can't know that.
-
They can only know what you present to them.
-
I'm finding out the work is becoming like
a monster sometimes in what it needs, and
-
I just keep feeding it.
-
The fact is I've almost set myself up in life
so that I can give completely or commit completely
-
to this process of creating.
-
I've never been married, I have no kids.
-
I love kids, I love women. [laughs]
-
But I don't have either.
-
So that tells you something about my commitment
to like this life.
-
We're all reaching.
-
I'm not talking just about artists, but I
mean we all are reaching.
-
As I'm creating, I know that I have the opportunity.
-
Whatever I feel or know, I make into material.
-
What a journey though.
-
I've enjoyed it for all of my life and still
I'm intrigued.
-
I still want to reach out.
-
I still want to reach.
-
I still want to reach.
-
I still want to reach.
-
There's no other way of doing it except for
this physical manifestation
-
of what I've been through.
-
If I were to say what my work was--actually
what my work was about--I couldn't tell you.
-
Even if I knew, I probably wouldn't tell you. [laughs]
-
[drill whirring]
-
As I'm moving closer and closer to answering
questions, at the same time,
-
I'm moving further away from the answers.
-
So all I have to do at this point is continue
to place my body in the act
-
of attempting to know.
-
(ambient electronic music)
-
To learn more about "Art in the Twenty-First Century"
-
and it's educational resources,
-
please visit us online at PBS.org/Art21
-
"Art in the Twenty-First Century" is available on DVD
-
To order, visit shopPBS.org or call 1-800-PLAY-PBS
-
(ambient electronic music)