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Stories cut from paper

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    (Applause)
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    (Applause)
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    I am a papercutter.
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    (Laughter)
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    I cut stories.
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    So my process is very straightforward.
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    I take a piece of paper,
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    I visualize my story,
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    sometimes I sketch, sometimes I don't.
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    And as my image
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    is already inside the paper,
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    I just have to remove
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    what's not from that story.
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    So I didn't come to papercutting
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    in a straight line.
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    In fact,
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    I see it more as a spiral.
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    I was not born
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    with a blade in my hand.
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    And I don't remember papercutting as a child.
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    As a teenager,
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    I was sketching, drawing,
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    and I wanted to be an artist.
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    But I was also a rebel.
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    And I left everything
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    and went for a long series of odd jobs.
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    So among them,
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    I have been a shepherdess,
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    a truck driver,
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    a factory worker,
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    a cleaning lady.
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    I worked in tourism for one year
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    in Mexico,
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    one year in Egypt.
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    I moved for two years
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    in Taiwan.
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    And then I settled in New York
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    where I became a tour guide.
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    And I still worked as a tour leader,
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    traveled back and forth
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    in China, Tibet and Central Asia.
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    So of course, it took time, and I was nearly 40,
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    and I decided it's time
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    to start as an artist.
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    (Applause)
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    I chose papercutting
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    because paper is cheap,
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    it's light,
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    and you can use it
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    in a lot of different ways.
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    And I chose the language of silhouette
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    because graphically it's very efficient.
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    And it's also just getting to the essential of things.
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    So the word "silhouette"
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    comes from a minister of finance,
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    Etienne de Silhouette.
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    And he slashed so many budgets
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    that people said they couldn't afford
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    paintings anymore,
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    and they needed to have their portrait
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    "a la silhouette."
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    (Laughter)
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    So I made series of images, cuttings,
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    and I assembled them in portfolios.
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    And people told me --
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    like these 36 views of the Empire State building --
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    they told me, "You're making artist books."
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    So artist books have a lot of definitions.
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    They come in a lot of different shapes.
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    But to me,
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    they are fascinating objects
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    to visually narrate a story.
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    They can be with words
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    or without words.
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    And I have a passion
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    for images and for words.
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    I love pun
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    and the relation to the unconscious.
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    I love oddities of languages.
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    And everywhere I lived, I learned the languages,
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    but never mastered them.
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    So I'm always looking
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    for the false cognates
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    or identical words in different languages.
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    So as you can guess, my mother tongue is French.
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    And my daily language is English.
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    So I did a series of work
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    where it was identical words
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    in French and in English.
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    So one of these works
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    is the "Spelling Spider."
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    So the Spelling Spider
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    is a cousin of the spelling bee.
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    (Laughter)
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    But it's much more connected to the Web.
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    (Laughter)
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    And this spider
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    spins a bilingual alphabet.
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    So you can read "architecture active"
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    or "active architecture."
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    So this spider goes through the whole alphabet
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    with identical adjectives and substantives.
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    So if you don't know one of these languages,
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    it's instant learning.
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    And one ancient form of the book
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    is scrolls.
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    So scrolls are very convenient,
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    because you can create a large image
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    on a very small table.
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    So the unexpected consequences of that
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    is that you only see one part of your image,
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    so it makes a very freestyle architecture.
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    And I'm making all those kinds of windows.
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    So it's to look beyond the surface.
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    It's to have a look
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    at different worlds.
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    And very often I've been an outsider.
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    So I want to see how things work
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    and what's happening.
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    So each window
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    is an image
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    and is a world
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    that I often revisit.
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    And I revisit this world
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    thinking about the image
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    or cliché about what we want to do,
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    and what are the words, colloquialisms,
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    that we have with the expressions.
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    It's all if.
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    So what if we were living in balloon houses?
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    It would make a very uplifting world.
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    And we would leave a very low footprint on the planet.
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    It would be so light.
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    So sometimes I view from the inside,
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    like EgoCentriCity
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    and the inner circles.
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    Sometimes it's a global view,
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    to see our common roots
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    and how we can use them to catch dreams.
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    And we can use them also
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    as a safety net.
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    And my inspirations
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    are very eclectic.
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    I'm influenced by everything I read,
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    everything I see.
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    I have some stories that are humorous,
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    like "Dead Beats."
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    (Laughter)
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    Other ones are historical.
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    Here it's "CandyCity."
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    It's a non-sugar-coated
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    history of sugar.
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    It goes from slave trade
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    to over-consumption of sugar
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    with some sweet moments in between.
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    And sometimes I have an emotional response to news,
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    such as the 2010 Haitian earthquake.
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    Other times, it's not even my stories.
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    People tell me their lives,
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    their memories, their aspirations,
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    and I create a mindscape.
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    I channel their history
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    [so that] they have a place to go back
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    to look at their life and its possibilities.
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    I call them Freudian cities.
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    I cannot speak for all my images,
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    so I'll just go through a few of my worlds
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    just with the title.
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    "ModiCity."
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    "ElectriCity."
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    "MAD Growth on Columbus Circle."
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    "ReefCity."
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    "A Web of Time."
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    "Chaos City."
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    "Daily Battles."
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    "FeliCity."
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    "Floating Islands."
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    And at one point,
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    I had to do "The Whole Nine Yards."
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    So it's actually a papercut that's nine yards long.
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    (Laughter)
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    So in life and in papercutting,
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    everything is connected.
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    One story leads to another.
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    I was also interested
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    in the physicality of this format,
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    because you have to walk to see it.
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    And parallel to my cutting
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    is my running.
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    I started with small images,
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    I started with a few miles.
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    Larger images, I started to run marathons.
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    Then I went to run 50K, then 60K.
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    Then I ran 50 miles -- ultramarathons.
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    And I still feel I'm running,
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    it's just the training
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    to become a long-distance papercutter.
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    (Laughter)
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    And running gives me a lot of energy.
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    Here is a three-week papercutting marathon
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    at the Museum of Arts and Design
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    in New York City.
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    The result is "Hells and Heavens."
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    It's two panels 13 ft. high.
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    They were installed in the museum on two floors,
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    but in fact, it's a continuous image.
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    And I call it "Hells and Heavens"
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    because it's daily hells and daily heavens.
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    There is no border in between.
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    Some people are born in hells,
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    and against all odds, they make it to heavens.
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    Other people make the opposite trip.
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    That's the border.
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    You have sweatshops in hells.
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    You have people renting their wings in the heavens.
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    And then you have all those individual stories
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    where sometimes we even have the same action,
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    and the result puts you in hells or in heavens.
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    So the whole "Hells and Heavens"
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    is about free will
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    and determinism.
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    And in papercutting,
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    you have the drawing as the structure itself.
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    So you can take it off the wall.
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    Here it's an artist book installation
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    called "Identity Project."
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    It's not autobiographical identities.
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    They are more our social identities.
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    And then you can just walk behind them
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    and try them on.
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    So it's like the different layers
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    of what we are made of
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    and what we present to the world
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    as an identity.
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    That's another artist book project.
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    In fact, in the picture, you have two of them.
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    It's one I'm wearing
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    and one that's on exhibition
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    at the Center for Books Arts in New York City.
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    Why do I call it a book?
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    It's called "Fashion Statement,"
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    and there are quotes about fashion,
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    so you can read it,
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    and also,
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    because the definition of artist book
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    is very generous.
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    So artist books, you take them off the wall.
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    You take them for a walk.
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    You can also install them as public art.
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    Here it's in Scottsdale, Arizona,
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    and it's called "Floating Memories."
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    So it's regional memories,
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    and they are just randomly moved by the wind.
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    I love public art.
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    And I entered competitions
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    for a long time.
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    After eight years of rejection,
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    I was thrilled to get my first commission
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    with the Percent for Art in New York City.
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    It was for a merger station
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    for emergency workers and firemen.
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    I made an artist book
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    that's in stainless steel
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    instead of paper.
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    I called it "Working in the Same Direction."
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    But I added weathervanes on both sides
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    to show that they cover all directions.
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    With public art,
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    I could also make cut glass.
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    Here it's faceted glass in the Bronx.
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    And each time I make public art,
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    I want something that's really relevant
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    to the place it's installed.
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    So for the subway in New York,
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    I saw a correspondence
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    between riding the subway
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    and reading.
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    It is travel in time, travel on time.
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    And Bronx literature,
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    it's all about Bronx writers
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    and their stories.
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    Another glass project
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    is in a public library
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    in San Jose, California.
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    So I made a vegetable point of view
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    of the growth of San Jose.
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    So I started in the center
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    with the acorn
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    for the Ohlone Indian civilization.
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    Then I have the fruit from Europe
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    for the ranchers.
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    And then the fruit of the world for Silicon Valley today.
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    And it's still growing.
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    So the technique, it's cut,
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    sandblasted, etched
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    and printed glass into architectural glass.
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    And outside the library,
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    I wanted to make a place to cultivate your mind.
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    I took library material
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    that had fruit in their title
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    and I used them to make an orchard walk
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    with these fruits of knowledge.
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    I also planted the bibliotree.
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    So it's a tree,
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    and in its trunk you have the roots of languages.
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    And it's all about international writing systems.
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    And on the branches
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    you have library material growing.
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    You can also have function and form
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    with public art.
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    So in Aurora, Colorado it's a bench.
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    But you have a bonus with this bench.
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    Because if you sit a long time in summer in shorts,
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    you will walk away
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    with temporary branding of
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    the story element on your thighs.
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    (Laughter)
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    Another functional work,
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    it's in the south side of Chicago
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    for a subway station.
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    And it's called "Seeds of the Future are Planted Today."
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    It's a story about transformation
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    and connections.
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    So it acts as a screen
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    to protect the rail and the commuter,
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    and not to have objects falling on the rails.
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    To be able to change fences
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    and window guards into flowers,
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    it's fantastic.
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    And here I've been working for the last three years
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    with a South Bronx developer
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    to bring art to life
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    to low-income buildings
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    and affordable housing.
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    So each building has its own personality.
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    And sometimes it's about a legacy of the neighborhood,
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    like in Morrisania, about the jazz history.
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    And for other projects, like in Paris,
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    it's about the name of the street.
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    It's called Rue des Prairies -- Prairie Street.
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    So I brought back the rabbit,
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    the dragonfly,
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    to stay in that street.
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    And in 2009,
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    I was asked to make a poster
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    to be placed in the subway cars in New York City
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    for a year.
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    So that was a very captive audience.
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    And I wanted to give them an escape.
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    I created "All Around Town."
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    It is a papercutting,
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    and then after, I added color on the computer.
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    So I can call it techno-crafted.
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    And along the way,
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    I'm kind of making papercuttings
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    and adding other techniques.
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    But the result is always to have stories.
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    So the stories, they have a lot of possibilities.
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    They have a lot of scenarios.
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    I don't know the stories.
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    I take images from our global imagination,
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    from cliché, from things we are thinking about,
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    from history.
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    And everybody's a narrator,
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    because everybody has a story to tell.
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    But more important
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    is everybody has to make a story
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    to make sense of the world.
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    And in all these universes,
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    it's like imagination is the vehicle
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    to be transported with,
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    but the destination is our minds
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    and how we can reconnect
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    with the essential and with the magic.
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    And it's what story cutting is all about.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Stories cut from paper
Speaker:
Béatrice Coron
Description:

With scissors and paper, artist Béatrice Coron creates intricate worlds, cities and countries, heavens and hells. Striding onstage in a glorious cape cut from Tyvek, she describes her creative process and the way her stories develop from snips and slices.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
17:55
TED edited English subtitles for Stories cut from paper
TED added a translation

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