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STEVEN ZUCKER: We're at the
Museum of Modern Art looking
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at a really famous collage.
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It's Jean Arp, sometimes
known as Hans Arp.
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It's an untitled
object, but it's always
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known as Collage
with Squares Arranged
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According to the Laws of Chance.
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And that's exactly what it is.
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It's a gray piece of
paper, construction paper,
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almost children's
construction paper.
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And it's got some cream colored
and almost denim blue colored
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squares that have been
ripped into these shapes
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and then scattered
on the surface.
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BETH HARRIS: What strikes me
is what year we're at, which is
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1916 and '17's,
sort of at the end--
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STEVEN ZUCKER: We're right
in the middle of the war--
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BETH HARRIS: --of the First,
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STEVEN ZUCKER: --or
the end, right.
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BETH HARRIS: --middle end
of the First World War.
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But what strikes me is how far
we've come from Les Demoiselles
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d'Avignon, which is 1907.
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And really how radical--
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STEVEN ZUCKER: --Ten years.
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BETH HARRIS: --yeah, but how
radical Dada was for a time.
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We have a completely
abstract work.
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We have it not arranged with
any kind of artistic intention.
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STEVEN ZUCKER: It really
begins to play fast and loose
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with the very definition
of what a work of art is.
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BETH HARRIS: Yes, absolutely.
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STEVEN ZUCKER: It sort
of rips at the heart
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of what our definition
is historically.
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BETH HARRIS: It's
not self-expression.
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It's not skill.
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It's not an expression
of the unconscious,
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even, like surrealism
would claim later.
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STEVEN ZUCKER: So it's
actually in some ways
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still really
challenging in that--
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BETH HARRIS: It is.
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STEVEN ZUCKER: --in
that we look at painting
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for the decisions of the artist.
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And here that's been given up.
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BETH HARRIS: Completely.
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STEVEN ZUCKER: It is a
kind of real anti-art.
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It's a--
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BETH HARRIS: It is
a real anti-art.
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STEVEN ZUCKER:
--real destruction
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of the very
foundation with which
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we understand how to deal with
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BETH HARRIS: It is.
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STEVEN ZUCKER: --an
object in space.
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BETH HARRIS: And,
it still is, right.
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STEVEN ZUCKER: And it's
an extraordinary thing.
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So how can we
understand this though,
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in the context of the war?
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You mentioned that
this was 1916, 1917.
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BETH HARRIS: Yes.
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STEVEN ZUCKER:
The war is raging.
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It's unprecedented.
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But this is being
made in Zurich.
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You know, Arp was one of the
founders of the Zurich Dada
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movement, and Zurich, of
course, is a neutral--
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BETH HARRIS: Country.
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STEVEN ZUCKER: It's--
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BETH HARRIS: Switzerland.
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STEVEN ZUCKER: --in Switzerland,
a neutral country, right?
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So I guess I'm just
wondering, where
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is the relationship between
this kind of aggression
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against the traditions of
art and the violence that's
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taking place across Europe.
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BETH HARRIS: Well, I think
the answer that's usually
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given to that is that
this sort of emphasis
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on rational and on human reason
was part of bourgeois culture
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that had created
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STEVEN ZUCKER: The violence.
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BETH HARRIS: The violence
and the irrationalness
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of World War I. But
what strikes me also
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is just the irrationality
people-- because this
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is something created according
to the laws of chance.
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And people are being
called to the war.
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They're being drafted.
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They're sent to the front lines.
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They live, they
die, they suffer.
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STEVEN ZUCKER: It
was all chance.
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BETH HARRIS: They get
legs and limbs amputated,
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all basically on a
roll of the dice.
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STEVEN ZUCKER: Yeah.
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And Arp would have seen that.
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The number of veterans
that came back--
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BETH HARRIS: Everyone saw it.
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STEVEN ZUCKER: --who
were deformed, who had--
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BETH HARRIS: Post-traumatic
stress syndrome.
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STEVEN ZUCKER: --limbs blasted,
who had been exposed to gas
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and been disfigured,
was extraordinary.
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And then those that
came back unscathed.
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BETH HARRIS: Right, what
rules are there in life?
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Where is the rationality
for what happens to who
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for what reason?
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STEVEN ZUCKER: It actually
makes the absurdity of this
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object somehow
much more profound.
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BETH HARRIS: Yep.