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Robert Adams in "Ecology" - Season 4 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21

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    ROBERT ADAMS: The final strength 
    in really great photographs
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    is that they suggest more than 
    just what they show literally.
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    Photography and poetry both center on metaphor.
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    My subject has fundamentally for 
    forty years been the American West.
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    The first serious photography I did that 
    had any success to it began in Colorado.
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    Living in Colorado Springs at the time I started
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    to photograph along the emerging suburban strip.
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    I was taking pictures of the 
    tract houses and highways.
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    I came into the dark room and printed 
    them and I was really surprised.
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    I thought I was taking pictures 
    of things that I hated,
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    but there was something about these pictures,
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    they were unexpectedly, disconcertingly glorious
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    and from that grew a project called The New West
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    which really was the first serious work I did.
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    I’d like to document what’s glorious in the west,
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    and remains glorious, even 
    despite what we’ve done to it.
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    I’d like to...to be very truthful about 
    that but I also want to show what is…
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    what is disturbing and what needs correction.
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    The best way to do that, and it’s 
    the way every artist dreams of,
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    is to show it at the same time 
    in the very same rectangle.
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    The effort is to find that perfectly 
    balanced frame where everything fits.
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    It’s not exactly the same as life, it’s…
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    it’s life seen better.
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    Here’s a picture of mine that I’m happy with.
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    The bottom of the picture is 
    a kind of bowl of dark trees.
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    In this bowl is the city of Boulder and 
    beyond it is a few of the plains and to me,
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    that’s a successful picture because
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    it does suggest some of the contradictory 
    nature of the western experience.
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    Similarly, I took a picture once of a 
    woman silhouetted in a tract house window,
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    and in one sense that’s a picture 
    of the saddest kind of isolation
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    and most inhumane building.
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    But also raining down over this 
    picture onto the roof and the lawn,
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    is glorious, high altitude light.
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    There’s no light like Colorado and 
    you can see it in this picture.
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    It’s just absolutely sublime light.
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    Your decision to make a 
    photograph is a kind of seduction
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    and the seduction is worked by light.
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    Many, many times, thousands of exposures,
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    were made in a state of helplessness.
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    I simply had to do that.
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    There was nothing could keep 
    me from pressing the trigger.
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    Most of my pictures at the ocean 
    were taken from the south jetty
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    on the Oregon side of the 
    mouth of the Columbia River.
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    In five or ten minutes the whole 
    surface of the sea will change.
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    To retake a landscape 
    picture is almost impossible.
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    But it’s even more so for seascapes.
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    It was a wonderful experience.
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    It was just surrendering yourself to something.
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    Every photographer wants to do books.
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    For obvious reasons, they reach a 
    wider audience than exhibitions do
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    and they allow the audience to consider 
    the work over a longer period of time.
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    Putting pictures next to each other inevitably 
    influences the nature of both pictures.
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    We work hundreds upon hundreds of hours.
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    A major book will require that in terms of editing
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    and that’s what Charsten, my 
    wife, has helped me with, t
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    hat together with being my text 
    editor for my entire working life
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    and our married life together.
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    She’s the person whom I have absolute trust in.
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    Almost every book begins with a gift.
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    A picture you didn’t expect.
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    There are a lot of surprises in photography
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    and if you’re not interested in surprises 
    you shouldn’t be a photographer.
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    It’s one of the great, 
    enlivening blessings of the…
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    of the medium.
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    At your best, it teaches you 
    to try to remain open to new…
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    new experience because the gifts 
    are sometimes really exciting.
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    I took pictures in southern California 
    over a period of three years.
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    The strange thing is that 
    although southern California
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    of course stands under this pall of smog,
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    nonetheless the light that filters down 
    through that smog is extraordinary.
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    It’s an amazingly verdant if 
    somewhat ominous landscape.
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    Very beautiful country, still.
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    After I spent some time working in the…
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    in California I then began 
    to turn to the northwest.
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    The book Turning Back is 
    fundamentally about deforestation.
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    It’s not just a matter of exhaustion of resources.
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    I do think there is involved 
    an exhaustion of spirit.
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    Look at that...all those little industrial trees.
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    Not a single tree in sight that’s 
    over thirty-five, forty years old.
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    I think the reason I care about that awful place
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    was not only that it sat within 
    about six feet of the road,
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    they had the temerity to cut this tree,
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    but this contemptuous beer can.
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    Boy does that capture what this 
    landscape does to the spirit.
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    It brings out everything 
    desperately close to nihilism
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    in everybody who passes by.
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    It’s a breeding ground for contempt.
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    Some of the earliest memories 
    I have with my father
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    are in teaching me how to 
    saw wood and hammer nails,
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    and if you learn it early it 
    becomes mysteriously central
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    and helpful to your health of spirit.
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    It’s a mainly just a wonderful way to 
    relate to the world in another way,
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    it’s like you might use music.
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    Now you can remember things in your hands
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    and you can know things with your hands
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    that you can’t know with your head.
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    Edward Thomas observed that 
    people and trees are quote,
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    imperfect friends, unquote,
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    citing the tragic nature of 
    people and the silence of trees.
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    There are however, times of harmony.
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    With Lombardi poplars, for instance,
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    whose thirst and fragility 
    might tempt us to cut them down,
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    but whose beauty gives us pause.
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    They seem to say with us what we 
    can not say perfectly by ourselves.
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    I will praise thee, oh Lord, with my whole heart.
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    This is a wonderful poplar that Charsten 
    and I found on the high desert of Oregon,
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    and we spent about eight hours over 
    two days photographing this tree
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    in different lights at different hours.
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    I have yet to know anybody who does 
    not have some response to poplars.
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    There’s a voice. And uh, 
    thank goodness it’s there.
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    You know if you haven’t loved 
    a tree enough to if not hug it
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    at least want to walk up to it and touch it,
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    as if you’re touching a profound mystery,
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    if that experience has eluded you,
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    I feel bad for you.
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    This was such a dramatic place.
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    I think both you and I knew that…
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    that something had to come out of 
    this kind of valley of death here,
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    and then we found these enormous stumps.
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    And you went and sat down, and 
    I thought, god there it is.
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    There’s the...the posture that conveys 
    the utter sorrow one feels here.
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    ADAMS: What a place.
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    CHARSTEN: Well, what strikes me is the 
    fact that it’s a black and white landscape.
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    With a tiny fringe of green sometimes.
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    And that’s how I think of that place.
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    ADAMS: I was just going to say, 
    that’s...that’s almost what it was.
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    ADAMS: I remember there didn’t 
    seem to be anything possible to say
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    and then we read some lines by W.S. Merwin.
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    “After an age of leaves and feathers,
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    someone dead thought of this mountain as money,
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    and cut the trees that were here 
    in the wind and the rain at night,
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    it is hard to say it.”
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    Beauty, which I admit to being in pursuit of,
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    is an extremely suspect word 
    among many in the art world.
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    But I don’t think you can get along without it.
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    It’s the confirmation frankly 
    of...of meaning in life.
Title:
Robert Adams in "Ecology" - 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:
12:24

English (United States) subtitles

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