-
(lively music)
-
(bass plays)
-
- I've always resisted the idea
-
that somehow my practice is archival.
-
It's about using the material
that's available to me,
-
and that material is
incredibly rich material.
-
(upbeat music)
-
It's not archival to me any
more than the fact that,
-
you know, when a composer
sits down to make a new piece,
-
the notes are there.
-
(upbeat music)
-
Beethoven, Bach, Cecil
Taylor, Duke Ellington,
-
they're not creating new notes,
-
you know what I mean?
-
They're sequencing the notes.
-
(upbeat music continues)
-
Do they just amplify the same frequency?
-
It just got louder.
(upbeat music)
-
You know, is it a counterpoint
to that frequency?
-
At its core,
-
it's just about how do you
make a thing of beauty?
-
(upbeat music)
-
And a thing of beauty to me is a thing
-
that you wanna look at.
-
And then in conjunction with that,
-
maybe you do other things like say,
-
"Hey, Black people are human beings too."
-
(upbeat music continues)
-
(birds chirp)
(traffic passes)
-
A lot of what I do is just
-
a kinda structured free association.
-
"Mickey Mouse was a Scorpio",
-
it's Mickey Mouse and Damballah
-
and even though they
couldn't be more different
-
on a certain material
level, one is an animation,
-
the other is a photograph
of a witch doctor.
-
But when you see those two,
-
it's very clear you're looking at
-
the same entity in two
different iterations.
-
That's a fundamental
thing I'm interested in.
-
Like, that's sort of very specific
-
and local big bang that
happens when you put one,
-
I would argue, Black being
next to another Black being.
-
Like, what is engendered by that?
-
(intense music)
(background chatter)
-
Even the films or the videos
are just extensions of that.
-
It's like, what happens when you do that?
-
- I know that every person
walking this planet.
-
- [Arthur] And then you do it again.
-
- Came from a womb and
because I have one of those.
-
- [Arthur] You know,
you have one big bang,
-
you put it next to another big bang
-
and then another big bang,
-
then another big bang.
-
- Bitch, I'm a mother, no drama.
-
The fact that y'all
think that being a woman
-
is about cosmetics lets me know
-
that y'all don't know the
hell y'all talking to.
-
(tranquil music)
-
- And the picture unit is just another way
-
to sequence images.
(tranquil music)
-
You know, I call it a maze,
-
but it's less of a maze
than a kind of guided tour.
-
You know, with a certain possibility of
-
insights into relationships
-
that wouldn't necessarily
be available to you.
-
(intense music)
-
As you physically move through it,
-
you know, if you go forward a step,
-
you're gonna see another thing
-
and people just say like,
they saw this gruesome image,
-
and they just like put their head down
-
and just moved forward,
-
but only to be confronted
with another gruesome image,
-
you know what I mean?
-
And the thing about it is like,
-
they are quote unquote gruesome
images in it, for sure.
-
You see this gruesome scene,
-
then you see an image with a Black woman
-
with a piece of wood in her hand.
-
Like, what's the relationship?
-
(intense music)
-
What's the nature of,
-
you know, absorbing or
being subjected to violence?
-
(intense music)
-
Every time I open this shit up,
-
it's just like that is a thing.
-
So now I'm trying to figure
out what to do with it.
-
I think it's in here.
-
It may not be in here, but let me see.
-
I think I put it in here.
-
That's "Apex".
-
Now I just basically had a
file that had stuff in it,
-
and then at some point I
started putting it in order
-
and I would just do this
while I was talking about it.
-
And then at some point like,
-
oh, let's just put it on a timeline
-
so you don't have to click,
-
you know what I mean?
-
(electric music)
-
"Apex" is about a rock band in the future.
-
The story happens during
the course of the world
-
as we know it coming to an end.
-
(electric music)
-
The so-called fine art space,
-
it's mostly interesting
because it's so flexible,
-
like in terms of what it
is, you know what I mean?
-
I can't imagine another space
-
that's better in terms of playing
with these sorts of ideas.
-
(soft music)
-
I studied architecture
at Howard University.
-
Realized pretty much two years in
-
that I was ambivalent about that
-
because it was hard for me to imagine
-
what it was gonna look
like on a day to day.
-
But my interests very quickly
-
were consolidated around the idea
-
that I think initially I understood
-
as being related to architecture.
-
You know, and it would be something like,
-
if Kind of Blue was a house,
what would it look like?
-
Or if Electro Ladyland was a house,
-
what would it look like?
-
Using Black music as a preeminent example,
-
of Black aesthetics in action.
-
What I've come to understand is that
-
that impulse to demonstrate the breadth
-
and complexity of transposing
-
Black aesthetics to anything you do
-
is what I was kind of interested in.
-
If you look at where
Afro-American culture is strong,
-
it is in the spaces of
immaterial expressivity.
-
You know, music, dance, things like that,
-
things that you could do on your body.
-
♪ This is a God dream ♪
-
♪ This is a God dream ♪
-
♪ We on an ultra light beam ♪
-
♪ We on an ultra light beam ♪
-
- Black people wore raw materials
-
so the whole notion of making things,
-
meaning being able to utilize material
-
wasn't so straightforward.
-
Black people remake things
by using them differently
-
than they were intended.
-
The appropriation thing
-
allowed me to maneuver
in a way that made sense
-
for me as a Black person, given my,
-
as I pointed out,
-
relationship to material.
-
Taking this and putting it next to that
-
it is like saying I don't
have to have material.
-
I don't have to make material.
-
I don't have to make
anything to make something.
-
- Yeah, no, I got you, bro.
- I'm about to break away.
-
- No, no, no, I just wanted
to come get some love.
-
That looks great.
-
- Yeah, it's a, again,
-
it's a artifact for my alternate universe
-
because she never had a record, you know.
-
It's just a still from a video, man.
-
- [Officer] Turn away.
-
Walk backwards, keep
your hands up in the air.
-
Keep going.
-
- [Officer 2] Come on back, come on back.
-
Keep walking backwards.
-
Keep walking backwards.
-
- As I like to say,
-
we are the canaries in the mine shaft
-
of Western civilization.
-
Nobody wants to be where we are.
-
Nobody wants to be Black.
-
But at the same time,
-
when they see Black people,
almost paradoxically,
-
we also exist as a kind of
emblem of the possibility
-
of transcending profound constraints.
-
You know what I mean?
-
Like everybody has their foot on our neck,
-
but we constantly stand.
-
(electric music)
-
So given we've come through it
-
and it's generated this
thing we call Blackness,
-
Black music, Black
dance, Black life force,
-
all these kinds of things,
-
how do we mine that?
(electronic music)
-
It's less that the playing field
is uneven for Black people.
-
It's more like the playing field
-
is just more complex for Black people.
-
You know what I mean?
-
That's an opportunity to
contend with a landscape
-
that's more interesting
than a flat landscape.
-
(mid tempo music)
-
(piano music)
-
It is not about, it's a handicap.
-
It's not a handicap.
-
It's an opportunity to,
-
it's so funny, it's like
opportunity to levitate.
-
(slow piano music)
-
♪ Oh (indistinct) ♪
-
♪ When you hit that fog ♪
-
♪ And it'll start for y'all ♪
-
♪ You say that I know we'll all do well ♪
-
(slow music)