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How drawing can set you free

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    So here we are,
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    I'm at home, as I'm sure
    many of you are too.
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    And we've all begun to understand
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    how our relationship with ourselves,
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    with each other,
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    and the spaces we exist
    and can deeply impact
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    our sense of identity and purpose.
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    So much has dramatically changed.
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    There's a sense of distance now
    unlike ever before.
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    But what if I told you
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    that you could find a way
    from your heart to your hand
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    to reconnect again.
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    And that through this practice,
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    and embracing this cause,
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    I could help you to recalibrate your mind
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    so that you could explore
    this new reality with joy,
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    enthusiasm, imagination and hope.
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    And all it would take is a simple pen.
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    To get you there,
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    let's go back to the beginning.
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    As a kid growing up in a council estate
    in South East London,
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    I was an outsider.
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    I'm the oldest of six kids,
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    and all of my siblings are very English:
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    blond hair, blue eyes, very cute.
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    And then here was me,
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    half Nigerian, brown, with an afro.
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    So what happens when you look different
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    and you feel different,
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    and in many ways,
    start to think differently
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    from everyone and everything around you?
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    How do you find your way
    out of a dark, racist, homophobic
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    and very lonely place?
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    This is where the pen comes in.
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    I started to draw.
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    So as you can see, I've got this pen,
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    and it knows where it's going.
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    And I've learned very well
    how to follow it.
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    And the first thing I did
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    is I followed this line
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    and I drew myself out of a culture
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    that was only telling me
    what I couldn't do.
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    I trusted my pen,
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    and it led me to central Saint Martin's,
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    a very fancy art school in London,
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    where I graduated top of my year.
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    However, I soon realized
    there wasn't a place for me in London
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    because whether you wish
    to believe it or not,
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    England is still a country
    that is rooted and functions
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    within the class system.
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    And as a young, black, gay female artist
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    from a working class family,
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    I didn't stand a chance.
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    So I left London and I moved to Japan,
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    where I didn't experience
    people asking me where I was really from.
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    I was just another gaijin,
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    which ironically means outsider.
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    I was immersed in the culture
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    that honors both making and craft.
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    Where people perfect their craft
    over generations.
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    It's a culture that masters
    both time and space,
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    so that artist could truly
    create with freedom.
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    And what I discovered
    was a place I wasn't angry with.
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    Tokyo hadn't wronged me in a any way.
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    I could no longer create with anger,
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    or out of pain.
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    I had to bravely allow myself
    to create from a different place.
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    And what I found is this incredible tool
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    transcended a line on paper.
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    I found this thing
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    that connected my head to my heart.
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    And my hand to everything.
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    I could see the world in new ways.
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    I found connections in corners,
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    and the solutions to problems
    I never knew existed.
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    It's like the world with always
    positive and negative spaces
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    could now be seen.
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    And just by seeing it,
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    there was no longer any fear.
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    It's like my pen was a flashlight,
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    and the unknown was still there,
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    but it wasn't scary.
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    After five years of living in Japan
    and focusing on my craft,
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    I felt like I needed a new challenge.
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    So I moved to New York,
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    because that's what you do
    as an artist, right?
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    You move to the greatest city in the world
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    that has the ability
    to make you feel completely
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    and utterly invisible.
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    This is when I began to truly ask myself,
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    "Who are you?"
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    I would wake up in the morning,
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    and before I began my day,
    I would meditate on this.
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    And with this question in mind,
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    I kept drawing.
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    I followed the line.
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    I let it lead the way.
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    The process of picking up a pen,
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    something everyone has access to,
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    the act of giving myself
    permission to let go
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    of all thoughts, all fears, insecurities,
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    anything that would get in the way
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    of allowing myself to be completely me.
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    That became my way
    of experiencing freedom.
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    When I got to New York,
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    I didn't want to play
    by the rules of the art world.
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    I continued my practice as an outsider.
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    I kept drawing.
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    Curiosity became the ink for my pen,
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    and I continued to dive deeper.
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    Overtime, I began to create
    a bold, confident space for myself.
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    A space that was all my own.
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    Initially, it was just my bedroom.
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    But that bedroom ended up
    in The New York Times,
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    and suddenly, I was being seen and known
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    for this world I had created.
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    Since then,
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    I've created and collaborated
    with some of the most unique artists,
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    institutions and spaces,
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    from the screens of Times Square,
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    to the New York City Ballet
    for their incredible artist series,
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    where I interviewed a number of dancers.
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    Their stories and words
    became the foundation
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    of over 30 drawings and art works,
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    which took over the promenade walls,
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    windows and floors.
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    For a long time,
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    I wanted to create a space
    for contemplation and poetry.
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    And in 2019,
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    I was given the opportunity
    to do just that
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    by the Trust of Governor's Island.
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    They provided me with the perfect canvas
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    in the form of a former military chapel.
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    Meet The May Room.
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    With drawings on the exterior,
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    inspired by the history of the island,
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    you walk inside, you take your shoes off,
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    and there's a drawing on the floor
    in the form of a maze
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    that brings you back to you.
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    It's an invitation to become calm.
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    And this allows you to see
    phrases on the wall.
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    "May you be wise."
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    "May you sleep soundly at night."
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    "May we save trees."
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    May you, may you, may we.
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    And these phrases seem
    like they're rising from you,
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    or falling into you.
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    I've let my lines
    become much like a language.
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    A language that has unfolded
    much like life.
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    And when there has been silence,
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    I've sought connection
    through conversation,
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    asking questions to push
    through the discomfort.
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    Drawing has taught me
    how to create my own rules.
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    It has taught me to open my eyes
    to see not only what is,
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    but what can be.
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    And where there are broken systems,
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    we can create new ones
    that actually function
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    and benefit all,
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    instead of just the select few.
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    Drawing has taught me
    how to fully engage with the world.
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    And what I've come to realize
    through this language of lines
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    is not the importance of being seen,
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    but rather the gift of seeing
    that we give to others.
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    And how true freedom
    is the ability to see.
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    And I don't mean that literally,
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    because sight is only one way
    in which one can see.
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    But what I mean is to experience
    the world in its entirety.
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    Maybe even more so
    during the most challenging moments
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    like the one we face today.
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    I'm Shantell Martin, I draw,
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    and I invite you to pick up a pen
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    and see where it takes you.
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    (Music)
Title:
How drawing can set you free
Speaker:
Shantell Martin
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
07:47
Erin Gregory approved English subtitles for How drawing can set you free
Erin Gregory edited English subtitles for How drawing can set you free
Camille Martínez accepted English subtitles for How drawing can set you free
Camille Martínez edited English subtitles for How drawing can set you free
Camille Martínez edited English subtitles for How drawing can set you free
Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for How drawing can set you free
Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for How drawing can set you free

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