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Creative Growth Art Center in "San Francisco" - Season 9 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21

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    [Music Playing]
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    Oh, I like painting, I like doing clay.
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    I like all my artwork.
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    This is one of my square drawings
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    that I've done.
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    This, uh, drawing right here,
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    it makes me feel good
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    and I show my inspiration.
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    My name is Jackie
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    and I am going to take you on a tour.
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    I'll show you, that is a ceramics class.
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    This is the work class, right here
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    and there's sewing right here.
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    What're you sewing, Theresa?
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    My magic robe.
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    Oh, okay. Her magic robe. Okay.
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    And that's a teacher right here.
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    How're you doing?
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    Art is a great equalizer.
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    That transcends language.
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    That transcends culture.
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    That transcends disability.
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    Creative growth is about
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    artistic expression as a form of
    self empowerment
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    as a form of aesthetic development,
    as a form of saying
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    "this is who I am in the world".
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    Blue is cold and yellow is warm.
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    How do you know when you're reaching in
    there what you're getting out?
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    I can tell by the feel.
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    The feel?
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    Yep, the compartments, you know?
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    So what is the feel of green?
    What is that?
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    Green feels like freezing,
    red is hot.
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    So you're working with freezing and hot
    right now?
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    Yes.
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    Monica's been fascinated with color
    ever since she was really
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    a wee child, and I think losing her sight
    opened up a different connection
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    to the world of light, and shadow,
    and color.
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    Do you have a favorite foam shape
    to work on?
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    I like the logs,
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    the cubes,
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    the little tiny cubes,
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    and the spheres.
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    Logs, tiny cubes, and spheres.
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    Yeah, and the cakes too.
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    Yeah, and the cakes turned out great.
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    Yep.
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    I see her becoming more and more dedicated
    to her art
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    and it seems to fulfill her in deeper and
    deeper ways,
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    and for that, I feel so happy.
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    You know? Because she has so much to offer
    the world.
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    Yes, um, my name is Rosena Finister
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    [Crowd whooping and clapping]
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    and I'm from a small town in Louisiana,
    where all the poor people live at.
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    That's where I'm from.
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    This is the first type of art that I
    started doing.
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    Creative Growth currently serves
    162 artists at our studio every week.
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    When people come to the Creative Growth
    studio, for the most part
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    they've never made art before
    in their lives,
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    and we kind of welcome that.
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    Because it allows us to see who they are.
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    And, you know, there's no
    right or wrong;
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    we don't teach in a traditional way.
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    We say, you know, "what would you like
    to do?",
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    "what are you thinking about", "what did
    you dream about",
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    "what color do you like"?
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    Tell us your story.
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    [Jazzy music playing]
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    I've been coming here since 1992
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    I like to paint, I like to draw, and
    I like paintings of people --
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    like, different people.
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    And stars -- movie stars.
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    There are wholesome people.
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    Wholesome encounters.
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    What do you like to look at?
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    I like that one.
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    This one?
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    Yeah.
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    Look at that one?
    This is what?
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    What do you call the name
    of this painting?
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    "Inner Limits".
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    William is just such a brilliant artist.
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    And look at this.
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    Beautiful piece.
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    Do you remember making this?
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    I remember.
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    That's what? Praise Frisco?
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    Yeah.
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    He envisions through his work
    a utopian reality that he creates
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    for us all to live in.
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    A world where people who have died
    come back to life,
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    places where bad neighborhoods are safe,
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    where his family is happy,
    where the world is peaceful.
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    And, he believes the painting will be
    powerful enough
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    to make that a reality.
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    Riding on the spaceship, wholesome
    encounter spaceship.
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    There's not gonna be no more evils.
    No more aliens, no more monsters,
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    no more evils.
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    Uh-huh.
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    Creative Growth is really a
    Bay Area story.
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    The disability rights movement in the
    early 1970s,
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    Creative Growth really comes from that.
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    So, during that time, people with
    disabilities in institutions
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    were suddenly deinstitutionalized.
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    So, artists came together in Oakland,
    and put paint on a table,
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    and said "well, these people are gonna
    come here; creativity is the path forward"
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    I'm just doing a tree right now.
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    And, people with disabilities can
    communicate and be a vital part
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    of society.
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    Part of the Creative Growth plan when you
    come here and make art,
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    is that we represent you, and you show
    your work in the gallery.
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    If the work sells, the artist gets half
    the money.
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    Creative Growth, the nonprofit gets half
    the money.
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    We buy supplies and support the
    artists with that money.
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    If you came to Creative Growth, you could
    buy something for 10 dollars,
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    and you can buy something for
    75,000 dollars.
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    It's exactly like the contemporary art
    world.
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    As an artist's work develops, and it gets
    into collections, and museums,
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    and is highly sought after,
    the prices go up.
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    And Creative Growth artists follow that
    same path.
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    Judith Scott is one of the most well-
    known Creative Growth artists.
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    As an artist, Judith Scott transcended
    this difficult situation.
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    Where she was separated from her
    family and institutionalized
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    for almost 40 years.
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    She was Deaf and it wasn't known, so she
    never developed language,
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    and she was isolated.
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    So in her 40's, she comes to
    Creative Growth.
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    And, her method to talk to us
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    was art.
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    The process is very important to her
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    and the result of that process with these
    sculptures, with hidden objects,
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    and accumulated, protected things that
    were sacred or important to her.
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    I think Judith Scott's role in
    contemporary art is that
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    she has opened the door for a lot
    of people to see
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    who an artist can be.
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    [Mumbling]
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    Right?
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    Right.
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    [Mumbling]
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    You know, Dan's work is based on words.
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    He builds literally words on top of
    each other to form
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    his communication with the world.
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    Do you want me to pull it down?
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    Yeah!
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    Pull it gently, right?
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    Right.
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    [Mumbling]
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    Right.
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    We still don't know a lot about autism,
    but there's this big barrier there.
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    There's this person behind this barrier
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    and he can't communicate in a way that
    you and I can communicate with each other.
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    And to put himself down on this paper,
    that's Danny's opportunity to talk
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    to people.
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    Dan's work has definitely progressed in
    the years he's been here.
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    Dan became more and more interested
    in the graphic qualities of the letters,
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    of how to use paint, how to use the brush,
    how to work on massive pieces of paper.
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    He's very sophisticated, and he's a
    colorist.
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    He's clear about what he wants to do.
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    You know? And I think when you see that
    urgency in his work, it's because it's so
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    important to him, and because its so
    important for us to know who he is;
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    that he has thoughts like we do, that
    he's smart, that he's not to be dismissed.
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    [Music]
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    Dan Miller is in the Venice Biennale this
    year, which is this amazing achievement
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    for him as an artist.
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    It happens to be in the same room in the
    Venice Biennale as Judith Scott.
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    So, here are these two colleagues --
    their work looking right at each other
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    in a pavilion of contemporary artistry,
    using color in a powerful way.
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    Not a pavilion of disability, not a
    pavilion of the self taught,
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    not a pavilion of the freak show.
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    It's presented as an artist, making a
    statement about the world today,
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    and that's what they both did.
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    They both have, like every artist, a
    history that informs who they are
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    in the world today.
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    We shouldn't need to exist.
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    Dan should've gotten this in school.
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    Or William should've had this
    opportunity his whole life.
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    It shouldn't be that Creative Growth has
    to be here for those people; I am thrilled
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    that we're here and we love our artists,
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    but they should have access to creative
    outlets.
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    It's a human rights issue -- to be
    diminished somehow.
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    To be seen as not creative.
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    When those prejudices go away, then
    our artists have the same potential
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    to lead the culture, to be a part of our
    world, to inform me of who I am
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    as a person.
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    Look at all these people who -- they're
    all coming back to new lives?
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    Yeah, they're families.
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    And what kind of lives are they going
    to have now that they're back?
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    They're gonna have good lives.
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    Uh-huh.
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    They're gonna have good lives.
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    Uh-huh
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    [People talking]
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    To learn more about Art21 and our
    educational resources,
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    please visit us online at pbs.org/art21.
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    Art in the Twenty-First Century, Season 9
    is available on DVD.
  • 13:23 - 13:30
    To order, visit shop.pbs.org, or call
    1(800) PLAY-PBS.
  • 13:31 - 13:33
    This program is available for download
  • 13:33 - 13:34
    on ITunes.
Title:
Creative Growth Art Center in "San Francisco" - Season 9 - "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:
13:51

English subtitles

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