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Catherine Sullivan in "Paradox" - Season 4 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21

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    CATHERINE SULLIVAN: I walk to the center 
    of the room and then change places.
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    It’s a singular figure and then the group.
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    (SINGING)
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    SULLIVAN: I was always interested in 
    the body’s capacity for signification.
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    What was this kind of potential 
    for infinite transformation?
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    SULLIVAN: Pivot. Pivot, okay, very nice, good.
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    Okay, get some air.
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    That looks really like experimental 
    theater from the 70’s...
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    ACTOR: The ‘70s.
    SULLIVAN: Totally.
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    SULLIVAN: Even though by the 
    time I was eight years-old
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    I had never seen a piece of live theater,
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    somehow I had some idea that acting 
    would be an interesting thing to do.
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    So I originally went to school 
    to study acting and you know,
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    I was very dedicated to learning stagecraft.
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    When I begin working with actors, it 
    becomes all about creating behavior.
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    The bulk of the process is tasks and
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    particular kinds of choreography 
    that they have to master
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    or a way of speaking that they have to master.
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    It’s pure task.
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    My family had no interest in theater.
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    When I was younger we never went to see theater.
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    My mother worked at the famous 
    lithography studio, Gemini G.E.L.,
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    so I was exposed to visual art 
    before I was exposed to theater.
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    And I had contact with 
    Richard Serra, Jasper Johns,
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    so on the one hand there was this 
    interest in the medium of theater,
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    uhm, but in ideas that were more 
    situated within the fine arts.
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    My head was in both arenas all the time.
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    Because I came from theater,
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    I really enjoyed the pleasure of the 
    eyes to look where they wanted to look.
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    In an installation context, 
    there’s actually opportunity for
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    different kinds of content to 
    be present in different ways.
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    At some point it’s a direct 
    engagement with one single image.
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    Other times it’s an engagement 
    with a lot of different images
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    all competing for your attention.
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    The installation in Avignon was a private 
    house turned into an exhibition space.
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    There were a lot of mirrors so as you 
    walked through that particular space,
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    you saw screens in front of you but you saw
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    also reflections of screens 
    in these various mirrors.
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    The space had a lot of opportunity for
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    different kinds of vignettes of an oval screen
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    tucked into a closet or another room
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    would seem more presentational
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    and have a lot more decorative detail.
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    I’ve always loved that you can have so 
    much information that exists for you
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    but really sort of invokes your 
    judgment about what you like to look at.
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    The project FIVE ECONOMIES began 
    with work with several sources,
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    some coming from popular film,
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    another coming from real life
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    and another coming from research 
    that I was doing on popular ritual.
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    The filmworks included 
    WHATEVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE,
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    an Australian film called TIM, the MIRACLE WORKER,
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    the story of Helen Keller,
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    the real life story of a 
    woman named Birdie Joe Hoaks,
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    a twenty-five year-old woman who tried 
    to pass as a thirteen year-old boy
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    so that she could obtain social services in Utah,
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    and also these games played at wakes in 
    Ireland in the 17th and 18th Century,
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    “wake amusements,” very cruel and 
    kind of brutal, violent games.
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    These were all sources or models 
    which in some way or another
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    had to do with this paradox having to do with
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    pleasure at the misfortune of others.
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    There’s one actress in 
    particular who is engaged with
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    a number of different kinds of roles 
    and a number of different styles.
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    What becomes fascinating to me 
    in that case is this one person
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    can ascend, transcend, transform,
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    not only through the roles that she plays,
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    but also through the styles through 
    which those roles are filtered.
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    It was much more interesting 
    to me to work with actors
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    that didn’t need things to 
    be motivated by narrative.
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    I was so disgusted with the political 
    situation that I started reading
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    Thorstein Veblen’s The 
    Theory of the Leisure Class.
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    At the same time, I was working on the 
    movement sequences for THE CHITTENDENS.
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    These choreographies that were 
    all automated by numerals,
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    by these numerical sequences.
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    It’s what happens to the movement 
    once it’s in this office environment.
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    With this ensemble of middle management types
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    and 19th Century leisure class archetypes.
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    There’s a place in the work 
    where the kind of automation,
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    mechanization, et cetera,
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    there’s like a kernel of mindlessness which is
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    meant to be scary because it’s arbitrary.
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    I hope that that point is 
    continued to be made with the work.
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    It’s not so much a framing of the figure,
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    it’s the figure sort of in 
    the face of something greater.
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    It’s another kind of humanism, I would say.
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    Often there’s a kind of 
    experimentation that happens
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    in terms of what I want the photography to be
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    or what I’m kind of looking for.
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    What I’ll do is go out and just 
    practice in different conditions.
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    For me, camera is really a sort of preparation
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    and research tool so that I 
    have something to demonstrate
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    to the cinematographer what I 
    would like the shot to look like.
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    I thought about this a lot.
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    Whether or not it’s a good idea.
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    (LAUGHS)
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    To...to make a work that 
    has to do with places that
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    I’ve never been and things that 
    I have no direct contact with.
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    As a kind of foundation for a 
    project, that’s enormously unstable.
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    ICE FLOES OF FRANZ JOSEPH LAND
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    began with my interest in the 
    hostage crisis in Moscow in 2002.
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    A faction of Chechen separatists 
    stormed a Moscow theater.
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    The directness of that conflict is not something
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    that I would feel capable of touching on,
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    you know however, you know where 
    things kind of start to fan out
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    and if I can set up a situation 
    that engages those ideas, certainly.
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    That’s for me more interesting and
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    I think allows a kind of maybe more 
    complicated political discussion.
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    SPEAKER: I am the princess of the Arctic Sea.
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    CHORUS: You are the whore of the Arctic Sea!
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    SULLIVAN: The musical playing onstage 
    at the time was called Nord-Ost.
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    It was based on a novel from the ‘40s about
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    polar aviation and the Russian arctic.
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    In this case we extracted a series of 
    pantomimes which came from the novel.
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    These pantomimes were brutal or mechanized.
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    It requires very quick transitions 
    between one gesture or another.
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    You know as the performer, you must go.
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    You simply must go from A to B and if C is there,
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    then you must get there even faster. (LAUGHS)
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    You know it’s really not that I’m trying 
    to create this sense of suffering.
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    The content itself suggests other 
    kinds of oppressive cultural regimes
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    that I would like the movement to be analogous to.
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    It really is in this kind of 
    calculation of character, action,
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    setting, context that the work ultimately happens.
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    This troop of actors pantomiming 
    this novel throughout
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    the rooms of this Polish-American 
    social hall in Chicago
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    generated a content outside of anything 
    that I could have initially conceived.
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    And to me, that’s a very exciting relationship,
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    when you can have this 
    heightened theatrical activity
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    but it can encounter a space that 
    has a very particular rationale.
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    In a sense, kind of generating 
    then that third thing,
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    which uhm is…
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    is my art and…
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    and isn’t in some ways.
Title:
Catherine Sullivan in "Paradox" - Season 4 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"Art in the Twenty-First Century" broadcast series
Duration:
13:44

English (United States) subtitles

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