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Inside Maya Lin’s Art and Architecture | Art21

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    I think art is wonderful
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    because it's everything you've ever known,
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    and everything you've ever done
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    somehow percolating up,
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    working with ideas that you might want to explore.
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    And then you can just wake up one morning
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    and know what you want to do.
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    This is a very unusual art project.
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    I got a phone call out of the blue.
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    It was from an art consultant 
    in the city, wonderful woman.
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    And she said, "Congratulations, 
    you've been selected
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    to make an art work for the Frey Foundation
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    of the city of Grand Rapids."
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    and I said, "Well, what's the site?"
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    And it was one little corner.
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    It was called the "Percent for Art Corner"
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    of sort of a very tough park, 
    or what was left of a park.
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    There was a skating rink that 
    was in bad need of a repair.
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    And I said, "I don't believe an art work,
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    one singular object is going to help resolve
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    sort of the urban situation
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    of what this park is and is not doing,
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    but if the Frey Foundation is at all interested
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    in having me come in, having 
    the art act as a catalyst
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    to completely rework this park,
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    I would be extremely interested."
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    I think the idea of a skating rink
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    is something that just sort of piqued my fancy.
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    What I actually wanted to do
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    was take an idea of sculpture 
    and grow it into a park.
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    I didn't realize I was going to have to work
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    as an architect as well,
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    because the city then required 
    two or three buildings
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    to be part of the site.
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    A bandstand, a restroom facility,
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    I'll have put in all the lighting.
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    Yeah, it's not...
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    I wonder if you're gonna notice that.
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    That might be a good North Star.
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    <v Assistant>okay.</v>
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    <v ->Right?</v>
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    And so then we either go deep, deep blue.
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    Yeah, that works fine for the North Star,
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    because it's off-blue.
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    <v ->Okay.</v>
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    <v ->I'm really curious what this 
    looks like with ice on it.
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    We're soon gonna find out, with ice.
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    I sort of called this one 
    the three stages of water:
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    solid, liquid, and gas.
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    So the liquid is a water fountain
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    that's three feet above you.
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    A circle covered with water in 
    it flows off the front edge.
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    The mist or the gas fountain
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    is a ring of mist that'll come up,
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    and you could almost walk into the mist.
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    And of course, the ice is the ice skating rink.
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    The genesis started with water.
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    Grand Rapids actually took the 
    rapids out of the river there
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    for flooding reasons.
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    And I started to play with the idea
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    of bringing it back a little bit.
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    The starting of the rings, the terraced rings,
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    started as, if you took a drop of water
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    in the center of the pool, and let them come out,
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    and then it spun into an idea
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    of as much about astronomy and about the stars,
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    so it's almost like pulling 
    the stars into a pool of water.
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    It's sort of a reflection of 
    the night sky in the pool.
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    (group chuckling and chattering)
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    <v ->All right, this is it. 
    Now close your eyes.
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    <v ->Wow. This is not bad.</v>
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    (chattering)
    Just be careful, Sarah.
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    Wow.
    (gentle music)
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    It's a piece that marks a very set point in time
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    and connects it back to a 
    set occurrence in nature.
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    (ice skater yells)
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    It's up and running.
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    The skating rink's actually up first,
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    and I'll go back in to fine-tune 
    the landscaping, the trees.
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    My sculptures deal with 
    naturally occurring phenomena,
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    and they are embedded and very closely aligned
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    with geology and landscape 
    and natural earth formations.
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    It's all about a play back and forth
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    between inside works and outside works,
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    all trying to capture the landscape.
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    This is a group of atlases.
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    I bought about ten old atlases.
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    And I started making these 
    landscapes, craters, in them.
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    So this one sort of has a double crater.
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    So you go past through the first crater,
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    and there's a little island, 
    and you open it to the island,
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    and I'll make it more complex 
    island geography here,
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    which is what's going on.
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    So much of my artwork is very 
    large-scale outdoor works
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    that I like to retreat into the studio
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    and make a lot of the work myself.
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    And the trouble is the outdoor works
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    and the architecture tends to take up all my time,
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    so I find it very hard, as a struggle,
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    to be able to come back here and do this.
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    This is like the first work 
    I've done in a little while.
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    It's terrible.
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    (cat meows)
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    We have gone through a period 
    in art and architecture,
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    I think, modernity, industrialization,
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    which allowed for specialization.
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    There are very few architects 
    who are also solidly,
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    have a gallery.
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    Part of me is an artist.
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    The other part of me builds architecture.
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    I'm not at all wanting to have a large practice.
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    I don't want to practice architecture.
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    I love building a few buildings.
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    So I have to be very careful what I take on.
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    I've done some works that are extremely public
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    and extremely well-known,
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    and I think had I not done the Vietnam Memorial
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    and come out with the body of 
    work that since has come out,
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    I would have been able to be called an artist
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    about five years sooner.
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    But because I had done the Vietnam Memorial,
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    it was like, "Oh, you make monuments,"
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    whatever that means.
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    I mean, look at that one, the biggest one.
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    Dee-dee-dee-dee.
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    Dee-dee-dee.
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    I don't think I woke up one day and said,
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    "Oh, I'm going to be an artist 
    on some days and an arch..."
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    It was more I couldn't choose between the two,
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    nor did I choose to blend them.
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    You might be able to do this better than me.
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    It's taken me a body of work 
    to see how I am developing.
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    <v Acquaintance>I don't think so.</v>
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    <v ->No, it's solid, it's totally solid.</v>
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    It's been on for an hour now.
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    It's kind of surreal.
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    I really want to make this piece.
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    I'm actually playing with 
    the idea of taking this idea
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    and creating a work out of recycled rubber,
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    calling it "Playground."
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    It will be twice as big
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    as the untitled topographic landscape,
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    and kids can play on it.
Title:
Inside Maya Lin’s Art and Architecture | Art21
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"Art in the Twenty-First Century" broadcast series
Duration:
11:42

English (United States) subtitles

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