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[Lynda Benglis: "The Wave of the World"]
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[SOUND OF CICADAS]
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I feel that all artists are in a kind of situation
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that patterns their early memories.
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I was born in Louisiana--
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Lake Charles, Louisiana.
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I remember taking little sticks and little mossy forms
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and somebody told me that you could make a boat that way,
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with a leaf, and a stick, and a mossy form.
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So I began playing with what was on the ground a lot--
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just thinking about nature.
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I think all children do that.
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Later, I would travel the bayous in the motorboat.
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Louisiana had a whole area of waterways
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that then lead to the Gulf.
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So there were all kinds of channels and waterways,
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and I knew them.
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I really preferred being on the water in that way
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and discovering all these different things--
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boats that had sunken many years ago.
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[SOUND OF RAIN DROPS HITTING WOODEN BOARDS]
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[Queens, New York]
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[SOUND OF METAL CHAINS CLANKING]
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[Bob Spring, Modern Art Foundry]
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[BOB SPRING] This is a little bit like,
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"Welcome back, Lynda."
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Lynda made the model for this--
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this piece--
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in this room.
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[SOUNDS OF POWER TOOLS AGAINST METAL]
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[BENGLIS] I was so grateful.
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I thought it could have been lost at sea;
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I didn't know where it was,
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and then I saw it being stored in Louisiana.
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Now, those people that know it and know the history
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can see the fountain!
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It was a World's Fair contest in New Orleans;
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it was the last World's Fair in 1984.
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So I entered my idea, which was a wave.
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I've always been intrigued by waves--
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not the large ones that you see at Acapulco and the Pacific,
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you know where they roll in and they could....
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But I was always intrigued by these little Gulf waves
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because that's the first that I saw.
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I think it was maybe in the Seventies,
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I had the idea of doing fountains.
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Because really, what I was doing with the urethane
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was a frozen kind of liquid form,
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and I thought that that liquid form could be so beautifully extended with water.
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I had done waves off the wall.
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For this, I wanted to do a free-standing one.
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I did this seventeen-and-a-half foot cantilever in bronze
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of the idea of this liquid bronze umbrella-ing out and having water.
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[BOB SPRING] And she constructed the model for this out of foam.
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[BENGLIS] One-to-one ratio, six-pound density polyurethane foam.
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I was using a wire structure underneath,
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and in this case, I had the idea of the weather balloon.
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[BOB SPRING] So she had underneath here the original shape of this
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and then covered with plastic.
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And then she started applying the foam
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and letting it run.
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And the whole room had to all be sealed off,
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and she was in a...
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well, today you would almost call it a space suit,
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because the fumes from this were a little bit toxic.
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And so we had to bring fresh air in from outside--
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it went through a tube into her little uniform.
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After she was finished with the model,
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we made the molds on it.
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And we made the casting.
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Inside is an arrangement of pipes,
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water chambers, and everything else.
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And it's very nice to have it back.
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And we'll take care of it for her,
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and everything else.
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[JEFFREY SPRING] I mean, this piece was in a storage area
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for years after the World's Fair,
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so it's aged.
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[Jeffrey Spring, Modern Art Foundry]
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The surface needs to be restored--or re-colored--
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to her satisfaction.
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As long as the water works right, that's what really is left.
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--[BENGLIS] Okay, so no tooling, right?
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--Nothing?
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--[MAN] We just cut the gates...
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--[BENGLIS] Yeah, yeah...
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--[MAN] ...and give a finish on the surface.
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--[BENGLIS] Good. Okay, let's have the water.
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[SOUND OF WATER SPLASHING AGAINST CONCRETE]
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[BENGLIS] I was very excited to find that it was still in existence.
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[Kenner, Louisiana]
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It was in a sort of heap of things out in the open,
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and forgotten about--
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totally forgotten about.
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I had thought the hurricane might have cast it away
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and it was some anchor somewhere.
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[SOUND OF WATER SPLASHING IN FOUNTAIN]
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[New Orleans, Louisiana]
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[On label: Lynda Benglis; American, born 1941;
"The Wave of the World," 1983–1984; Bronze;
On loan from City of Kenner;
Underwritten by The Helis Foundation]
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I think of my work as being very classical.
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Essentially, I think I repeat ideas of nature,
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and I process them and interpret them.
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I realize that what we learn to do
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is repress our titillations
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or our feelings about what we see
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and we call it 'taste'.
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What is the way we see?
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What do we respond to without creating a taste
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that's agreeable to everyone?
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I'm not trying to satisfy anyone.
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I really make things because I'm curious--
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that's the reason.
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I don't think of shows,
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I don't think of anything other than,
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"It's exciting for me to feel that same excitement"
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"that I felt as a kid."