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[Tim Hawkinson: Family Resemblance]
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The first piece, as you walk into the space,
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is a railroad signal crossing lantern.
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We can unlock it and I can lower it for you.
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[INTERVIEWER, OFF-SCREEN] Oh, okay! That would be very...
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[HAWKINSON] An action shot.
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[INTERVIEWER, OFF-SCREEN] Yes, please!
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[HAWKINSON] I'm going to get the key.
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Could we get the key?
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Okay, there we go.
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Yeah, so...
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It's a butt-head Fresnel lens,
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using the same body molds that I used in the seahorse
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and then in the lens-mobile.
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The title is "Double Dutch".
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All the pieces in the show take their titles from Girl Scout cookies,
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and some of the cookies are retired Girl Scout cookies.
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Some are more...
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ones we're maybe more familiar with,
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like Samoa.
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Kookaburra, I think.
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But there are no Thin Mints.
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Nothing quite worked as a Thin Mint.
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My daughter Clare is a Brownie.
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A couple of months ago, she was in the process of making sales,
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going door-to-door with her list of Thin Mints
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and Tagalongs, and all that.
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My favorite is Samoa.
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I won't stick my tongue out, I just had coffee.
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[LAUGHS]
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I suppose I was working on the bronze figure--
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me with my tongue sticking out...
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The tongue sticking out had this very aggressive expression,
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like a Samoan war cry.
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I thought that would be a possible title,
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and then started looking at other Girl Scout cookie names
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as possibilities for other pieces,
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and some of them sort of fit almost like they were intentional.
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There are things in the show that I have made with Clare through time.
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She kind of has given me ideas.
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It's somebody now to bounce ideas off of,
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as well as to get this different perspective.
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She kind of appears in different guises.
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Maybe a little bit in the foot,
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which has a friendship ankle bracelet extension cord.
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I don't think that would be there if she weren't weaving me friendship bracelets
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and bracelets for her friends.
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That's Clare's bike.
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She learned to ride without training wheels.
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After she was no longer using it,
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I asked her permission to chop her bike up.
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[LAUGHS]
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She's kind of used to me coming up with these
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second lives for things lying around the house.
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The individual plates that a seahorse is composed of,
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they're called scoots.
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I wanted to use my different body impressions as all the scoots
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on the seahorse.
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So, down here are the fingers.
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Further up, thumbprints.
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The eyes are kind of bellybuttons.
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These kind of horn structures are my mouth
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just the forming of a kiss.
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You can kind of read body parts a little more clearly in the bubbles.
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You can see different skin textures.
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The largest one is my head--
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two skull caps, fit together.
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The seahorse is made out of polyester resin--
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the same material that I use to coat the animal piece,
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"Animal Treasures".
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It's a mobile.
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Each cub is balanced on the tooth of the next one.
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An infant's heart rate, within five seconds,
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will drop when it's being held by its mother or grandmother.
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There is this very, kind of, relaxed gesture there.
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This body of work is relating more to my family—
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specifically my parents.
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I mean, if you want to go personal for a moment,
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I can say that I just feel very torn being here
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because my mother is dying right now.
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You know, I reflected a lot on,
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you know, just the family relationship,
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and the embrace.
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So it has that kind of embrace,
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where each figure is placing its trust in the next generation up.