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Ellen Gallagher in “Play” - Season 3 | “Art in the Twenty-First Century"

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    ELLEN GALLAGHER: This is 
    almost done, you can take over.
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    I think it’s in the work that play with joy.
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    I think artists know that you can take a kind of,
    an advertising sign and make something joyful
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    and um, other with it.
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    And I think it’s sometimes uh,
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    hard for people who don’t make things
    to understand labor and joy and attention
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    and uh, whimsy.
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    I didn’t really come from a fine arts background,
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    although you know I certainly 
    went to museums as a kid.
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    I came from a carpentry background
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    and I worked in Seattle 
    building a bridge connecting uh,
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    Mercer Island and Seattle.
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    It was a floating bridge that 
    has since collapsed, but....
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    So when I went to art school about a year later,
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    that was what I knew how to do.
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    And I built a latticework grid and 
    stretched the canvas over that.
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    That way I could sit on the canvas as I um,
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    began gluing sheets of penmanship paper down.
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    Penmanship paper for me is more about gesture.
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    It’s not so much about grammar as it 
    is about how you make your letters.
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    So there’s this watery push and pull between the,
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    the watery blue of the penmanship 
    paper lines and then the,
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    the gestural marks made 
    in, inside and around them.
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    The larger works then are made in a similar way as
    the earlier penmanship paper works,
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    in that they are built from found material.
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    I’m basically collecting archival material
    from the 1930s through the 70s,
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    these Ebony magazines.
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    Ebony, Sepia and Our World.
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    They were kind of manifestos in a way, you know.
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    And um, but they were magazine,
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    they still were entertainment and um, but they,
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    they had a kind of urgency and a 
    necessity to them, also a whimsy.
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    I’m collecting advertisements 
    and stories and characters.
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    And I see them as conscripts in the sense that
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    they come in to my lexicon 
    without me asking them permission.
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    There’s still yet a specificity in each person’s,
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    I don’t know, the way they hold their body
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    or some subtle key that says, t
    his is who I am at this time.
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    It seemed to me to be about identity in,
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    in the most open sense of that word.
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    No matter how uniform or altered,
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    it just refuses to be stamped out.
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    ou know when you’re reading a magazine or a book
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    that’s a particular kind of reading.
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    It’s a kind of sequential, page by page and you,
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    you know, remember what
    you’ve just read five pages ago or you don’t.
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    And, but it’s, that’s how 
    you keep that information.
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    And the reading of a painting, what I,
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    what I loved was this idea of opening up the pages
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    so that your sequence was then more 
    spatial rather than sequential.
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    In the paintings there are 
    characters that repeat and recur.
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    Pegleg is one.
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    Sometimes there will be a compass next to Pegleg.
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    Those kind of signs are in the paintings to um,
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    activate Pegleg as both Ahab and Pegleg Bates.
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    I’m attracted to the 
    visceralness of the body of Ahab,
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    that wooden leg.
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    I also like the way in Moby Dick,
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    you’re so aware of people’s physical presence and,
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    and the sound that you know this 
    idea of these men hearing this
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    sort of scraping of the wood as, as uh,
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    Ahab dragged his leg across.
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    And the paintings for me functioned
    as a gate into the watery static realm.
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    And then that room in the back was
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    another kind of cabinet,
    the species cabinet.
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    That work is work I made as I traveled
    either in Cuba or in uh, Senegal.
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    And in Cuba is where all those colors came from,
    the green in particular.
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    And the red came from this,
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    this berry that you use to dye meat and rice.
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    So the kind of coral, red color came from that.
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    They’re also made by scratching 
    directly into the paper
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    and carving into the paper, much like scrimshaw.
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    I liked that idea of making 
    something so focused in this um,
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    in my case, in a new environment.
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    And I think in scrimshaw, it’s interesting to me
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    that you would make something on a,
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    a bone so like these detailed worlds that,
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    while you are out in the middle of nowhere,
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    trying to catch this giant monster.
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    I think there’s a way in which my 
    interest in the water and travel
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    in some specific ways may 
    have to do with the idea of
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    my family arrived here by water.
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    My father’s family came on 
    whaling ships from Cape Verde.
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    But the Irish came a while ago.
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    In a way the films do literally what I would hope
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    people would do with their 
    paintings in their mind.
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    The films, they’re also this grid 
    and it’s this grid where the, the…
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    each frame erases the frame 
    before it as you move forward.
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    So it’s, it’s literally a 
    projection of a grid in space,
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    but it’s in the same place over and over again.
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    The first film in that, in MURMUR 
    that I made is water ecstatic,
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    which is made much like the series 
    of drawings, Water Ecstatic,
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    through thick water color paper, 
    cutting into it and drawing over it.
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    The grid to DELUXE is each individual 
    page is its own drama or its own stage.
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    I wanted to mark him.
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    But I, I certainly couldn’t 
    give Isaac Hayes a wig.
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    I also didn’t want the tattooing 
    to obliterate his face.
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    And his shoulders just seemed 
    to be so beautiful to highlight.
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    The two marks on the shoulders 
    will be printed in black
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    and the face will be printed 
    in a transparent base,
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    sort of just an embossment over his skin.
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    Oh wow, so cool.
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    Can see it from the side.
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    Love that it’s so beautifully inked that 
    the engraving just looks like soft velvet.
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    It’s beautiful, thank you.
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    SPEAKER: My pleasure.
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    GALLAGHER: The necklace, which is 
    this sort of magic constellation
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    traced on the computer
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    and then a laser cuts all along the tracing lines.
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    That’s then removed, plucked away from the,
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    the skin of the paper.
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    This idea of repetition and revision 
    is central to my working process.
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    You know this idea of stacking and layering
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    and building up densities and you know recoveries.
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    He’s been altered in a way that um,
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    the character that is now 
    my conscripted Isaac Hayes
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    should be altered to be in my lexicon.
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    I think there is a nostalgia in…
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    in my uh, gathering of this material and,
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    and looking at this material 
    and trying to hold it still for,
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    for a moment in these paintings or in the films.
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    It’s not just a nostalgia in 
    terms of looking backwards,
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    it’s a way of imagining forwards.
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    As a way of constantly looking for home, you know,
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    yet your in that gesture you’re,
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    you’re continually moving forward
    and continually seeing the world.
Title:
Ellen Gallagher in “Play” - Season 3 | “Art in the Twenty-First Century"
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"Art in the Twenty-First Century" broadcast series
Duration:
13:37

English (United States) subtitles

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