1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:02,625 Usually I like working in my shop, 2 00:00:02,625 --> 00:00:06,958 but when it's raining and the driveway outside turns into a river, 3 00:00:06,958 --> 00:00:08,998 then I just love it. 4 00:00:08,998 --> 00:00:12,329 And I'll cut some wood and drill some holes and watch the water, 5 00:00:12,329 --> 00:00:15,208 and maybe I'll have to walk around and look for washers. 6 00:00:15,208 --> 00:00:18,140 You have no idea how much time I spend. 7 00:00:18,140 --> 00:00:20,167 This is the "Double Raindrop." 8 00:00:20,167 --> 00:00:23,292 Of all my sculptures, it's the most talkative. 9 00:00:28,430 --> 00:00:31,442 It adds together the interference pattern 10 00:00:31,442 --> 00:00:34,721 from two raindrops that land near each other. 11 00:00:34,721 --> 00:00:39,868 Instead of expanding circles, they're expanding hexagons. 12 00:00:44,945 --> 00:00:49,229 All the sculptures move by mechanical means. 13 00:00:54,890 --> 00:00:59,125 Do you see how there's three peaks to the yellow sine wave? 14 00:00:59,125 --> 00:01:05,225 Right here I'm adding a sine wave with four peaks and turning it on. 15 00:01:20,644 --> 00:01:24,110 Eight hundred two-liter soda bottles -- 16 00:01:24,110 --> 00:01:25,854 oh yea. 17 00:01:25,854 --> 00:01:28,090 (Laughter) 18 00:01:38,259 --> 00:01:41,917 Four hundred aluminum cans. 19 00:01:44,517 --> 00:01:47,277 Tule is a reed that's native to California, 20 00:01:47,277 --> 00:01:52,543 and the best thing about working with it is that it smells just delicious. 21 00:02:05,835 --> 00:02:08,783 A single drop of rain 22 00:02:08,783 --> 00:02:11,298 increasing amplitude. 23 00:02:32,883 --> 00:02:38,109 The spiral eddy that trails a paddle on a rafting trip. 24 00:02:48,263 --> 00:02:51,138 This adds together four different waves. 25 00:02:51,138 --> 00:02:54,059 And here I'm going to pull out the double wavelengths 26 00:02:54,059 --> 00:02:57,407 and increase the single. 27 00:02:57,407 --> 00:03:00,348 The mechanism that drives it has nine motors 28 00:03:00,348 --> 00:03:02,870 and about 3,000 pulleys. 29 00:03:12,516 --> 00:03:17,173 Four hundred and forty-five strings in a three-dimensional weave. 30 00:03:17,173 --> 00:03:20,012 Transferred to a larger scale -- 31 00:03:20,012 --> 00:03:23,090 actually a lot larger, with a lot of help -- 32 00:03:23,090 --> 00:03:26,857 14,064 bicycle reflectors -- 33 00:03:26,857 --> 00:03:30,606 a 20-day install. 34 00:03:49,683 --> 00:03:51,375 "Connected" is a collaboration 35 00:03:51,375 --> 00:03:55,179 with choreographer Gideon Obarzanek. 36 00:03:55,179 --> 00:03:58,520 Strings attached to dancers. 37 00:03:58,520 --> 00:04:00,942 This is very early rehearsal footage, 38 00:04:00,942 --> 00:04:03,304 but the finished work's on tour 39 00:04:03,304 --> 00:04:07,677 and is actually coming through L.A. in a couple weeks. 40 00:04:12,139 --> 00:04:17,171 A pair of helices and 40 wooden slats. 41 00:04:37,771 --> 00:04:41,000 Take your finger and draw this line. 42 00:04:41,000 --> 00:04:45,000 Summer, fall, winter, spring, 43 00:04:45,000 --> 00:04:51,237 noon, dusk, dark, dawn. 44 00:04:51,237 --> 00:04:54,500 Have you ever seen those stratus clouds 45 00:04:54,500 --> 00:04:57,173 that go in parallel stripes across the sky? 46 00:04:57,173 --> 00:04:59,768 Did you know that's a continuous sheet of cloud 47 00:04:59,768 --> 00:05:03,365 that's dipping in and out of the condensation layer? 48 00:05:03,365 --> 00:05:06,198 What if every seemingly isolated object 49 00:05:06,198 --> 00:05:10,042 was actually just where the continuous wave of that object 50 00:05:10,042 --> 00:05:13,523 poked through into our world? 51 00:05:13,523 --> 00:05:17,900 The Earth is neither flat nor round. 52 00:05:17,900 --> 00:05:22,323 It's wavy. 53 00:05:22,323 --> 00:05:27,821 It sounds good, but I'll bet you know in your gut that it's not the whole truth, 54 00:05:27,821 --> 00:05:29,379 and I'll tell you why. 55 00:05:29,379 --> 00:05:31,375 I have a two-year-old daughter who's the best thing ever. 56 00:05:31,375 --> 00:05:33,458 And I'm just going to come out and say it: 57 00:05:33,458 --> 00:05:36,993 My daughter is not a wave. 58 00:05:36,993 --> 00:05:41,573 And you might say, "Surely, Rueben, if you took even just the slightest step back, 59 00:05:41,573 --> 00:05:44,333 the cycles of hunger and eating, 60 00:05:44,333 --> 00:05:47,173 waking and sleeping, laughing and crying 61 00:05:47,173 --> 00:05:49,784 would emerge as pattern." 62 00:05:49,784 --> 00:05:52,411 But I would say, "If I did that, 63 00:05:52,411 --> 00:05:55,900 too much would be lost." 64 00:05:55,900 --> 00:06:00,629 This tension between the need to look deeper 65 00:06:00,629 --> 00:06:03,583 and the beauty and immediacy of the world, 66 00:06:03,583 --> 00:06:07,285 where if you even try to look deeper you've already missed what you're looking for, 67 00:06:07,285 --> 00:06:10,356 this tension is what makes the sculptures move. 68 00:06:10,356 --> 00:06:12,867 And for me, the path between these two extremes 69 00:06:12,867 --> 00:06:15,602 takes the shape of a wave. 70 00:06:15,602 --> 00:06:18,669 Let me show you one more. 71 00:07:00,100 --> 00:07:03,529 Thank you very much. Thanks. 72 00:07:03,529 --> 00:07:05,710 (Applause) 73 00:07:05,710 --> 00:07:06,942 Thanks. 74 00:07:06,942 --> 00:07:11,406 (Applause) 75 00:07:11,406 --> 00:07:13,179 June Cohen: Looking at each of your sculptures, 76 00:07:13,179 --> 00:07:15,607 they evoke so many different images. 77 00:07:15,607 --> 00:07:18,142 Some of them are like the wind and some are like waves, 78 00:07:18,142 --> 00:07:21,027 and sometimes they look alive and sometimes they seem like math. 79 00:07:21,027 --> 00:07:23,531 Is there an actual inspiration behind each one? 80 00:07:23,531 --> 00:07:27,087 Are you thinking of something physical or somthing tangible as you design it? 81 00:07:27,087 --> 00:07:30,227 RM: Well some of them definitely have a direct observation -- 82 00:07:30,227 --> 00:07:33,042 like literally two raindrops falling, 83 00:07:33,042 --> 00:07:35,917 and just watching that pattern is so stunning. 84 00:07:35,917 --> 00:07:41,606 And then just trying to figure out how to make that using stuff. 85 00:07:41,621 --> 00:07:44,150 I like working with my hands. 86 00:07:44,165 --> 00:07:46,375 There's nothing better than cutting a piece of wood 87 00:07:46,375 --> 00:07:48,125 and trying to make it move. 88 00:07:48,125 --> 00:07:49,875 JC: And does it ever change? 89 00:07:49,875 --> 00:07:51,000 Do you think you're designing one thing, 90 00:07:51,000 --> 00:07:52,750 and then when it's produced it looks like something else? 91 00:07:52,750 --> 00:07:56,208 RM: The "Double Raindrop" I worked on for nine months, 92 00:07:56,208 --> 00:07:58,534 and when I finally turned it on, 93 00:07:58,565 --> 00:08:02,208 I actually hated it. 94 00:08:02,208 --> 00:08:06,333 The very moment I turned it on, I hated it. 95 00:08:06,333 --> 00:08:09,681 It was like a really deep-down gut reaction, and I wanted to throw it out. 96 00:08:09,681 --> 00:08:11,825 And I happened to have a friend who was over, 97 00:08:11,825 --> 00:08:13,837 and he said, "Why don't you just wait." 98 00:08:13,837 --> 00:08:18,206 And I waited, and the next day I liked it a bit better, 99 00:08:18,206 --> 00:08:21,167 the next day I liked it a bit better, and now I really love it. 100 00:08:21,167 --> 00:08:25,833 And so I guess, one, the gut reactions a little bit wrong sometimes, 101 00:08:25,833 --> 00:08:28,375 and two, it does not look like as expected. 102 00:08:28,375 --> 00:08:30,792 JC: The relationship evolves over time. 103 00:08:30,792 --> 00:08:31,667 Well thank you so much. That was a gorgeous treat for us. 104 00:08:31,667 --> 00:08:34,554 RM: Thanks. (JC: Thank you, Reuben.) 105 00:08:34,554 --> 00:08:36,917 (Applause)