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Theaster Gates: Collecting | Art21 "Extended Play"

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    I should've prepared for you guys more.
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    Things are a little unruly.
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    --Yeah, right on the...
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    --In the same line, right here.
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    I have this keen interest in
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    not just autonomous, singular objects,
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    but whole collections of things.
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    Part of the reason I think I'm attracted
    to collections
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    is because they constitute one person's--
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    or one institution's--
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    way of seeing the world.
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    And it's like this little time capsule
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    of things that were important to someone.
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    And so, I spend a lot of time
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    looking for the personality of people
    within their collections.
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    And then maybe even trying to tease out,
    in a collection,
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    why those things are important.
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    So the first collection that I received is
    Prairie Avenue Bookstore,
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    which was a architectural history bookstore
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    in Downtown Chicago.
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    The second collection I purchased
    was Dr. Wax.
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    It was a record store in Hyde Park,
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    which is a neighborhood on the South Side.
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    I don't know how many albums...
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    Six thousand.
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    Eight thousand.
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    A lot of albums.
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    And the third collection was the University
    of Chicago's glass lantern slides.
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    I'm using the glass slides to
    teach art history sometimes.
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    Sometimes I include them as part of
    works of art,
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    or they become the works of art themselves--
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    in the case of the Jet magazines.
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    I've taken an amazing canon of
    Johnson Publishing magazines.
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    This is Jet magazine.
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    We had about twelve thousand unbound periodicals.
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    I had been binding them and color coding them
    by decade.
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    It's exciting, this body of work,
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    because it gets to ask questions about
    monochrome painting.
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    When they're functioning as a monochrome painting,
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    they're not necessarily functioning
    like an archive.
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    But, in fact, my hope is that
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    the history and the content that's loaded
    inside the books
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    will be waiting for people to unearth it.
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    As the magazine, it was making the work of
    the present.
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    It wasn't attempting to make an archive.
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    But it's so amazing that these bound volumes
    constitute the 1990s.
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    And it's a very particular 1990s
    Black-American experience.
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    And I feel really fortunate to have been able
    to bind these things
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    and then to make them present
    in the world again.
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    Right now, we're working on archiving
    this hardware store.
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    The hardware store was, again,
    kind of like Dr. Wax.
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    This amazing guy, Ken,
    had owned it for thirty years
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    and he was retiring.
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    We loved his building,
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    but we loved the stuff.
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    And so, we bought the entire hardware store.
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    In changing neighborhoods,
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    poor neighborhoods,
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    neighborhoods where a big box like
    Home Depot might move in,
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    what do you do with Ken's legacy?
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    How do you catalog the everyday,
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    especially as the phenomena of the everyday
    is changing?
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    And is this another way of
    tracking Black space?
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    Black, not necessarily just about Black people,
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    but about forgotten people.
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    It's a space where things have stopped growing.
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    And then maybe it's also, like, the void.
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    Like, resources go in,
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    and you're not sure where they go.
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    Black space.
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    Like...
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    Galactic space.
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    These are the things that I'm working with.
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    I'm having a lot of fun looking at these objects
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    both as sculptural objects
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    and as objects that have the potential to
    create new sculptural works.
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    It's the thing,
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    and it's the thing that makes the thing.
Title:
Theaster Gates: Collecting | Art21 "Extended Play"
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"Extended Play" series
Duration:
04:48

English subtitles

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