Arthur Ganson: Moving sculpture

52,038 views ・ 2008-05-28

TED


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00:18
A few words about how I got started,
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and it has a lot to do with happiness, actually.
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When I was a very young child, I was extremely introverted
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and very much to myself.
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And, kind of as a way of surviving,
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I would go into my own very personal space,
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and I would make things.
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I would make things for people
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as a way of, you know, giving, showing them my love.
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I would go into these private places,
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and I would put my ideas and my passions into objects --
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and sort of learning how to speak with my hands.
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So, the whole activity of working with my hands and creating objects
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is very much connected with not only the idea realm,
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but also with very much the feeling realm.
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And the ideas are very disparate.
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I'm going to show you many different kinds of pieces,
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and there's no real connection between one or the other,
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except that they sort of come out of my brain,
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and they're all different sort of thoughts that are triggered
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by looking at life, and seeing nature and seeing objects,
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and just having kind of playful random thoughts about things.
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When I was a child, I started to explore motion.
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I fell in love with the way things moved,
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so I started to explore motion by making little flipbooks.
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And this is one that I did, probably like when I was around seventh grade,
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and I remember when I was doing this,
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I was thinking about that little rock there,
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and the pathway of the vehicles as they would fly through the air,
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and how the characters --
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(Laughter) --
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would come shooting out of the car,
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so, on my mind, I was thinking about the trajectory of the vehicles.
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And of course, when you're a little kid, there's always destruction.
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So, it has to end with this --
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(Laughter) --
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gratuitous violence.
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(Laughter)
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So that was how I first started to explore the way things moved,
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and expressed it.
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Now, when I went to college,
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I found myself making fairly complicated, fragile machines.
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And this really came about
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from having many different kinds of interests.
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When I was in high school, I loved to program computers,
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so I sort of liked the logical flow of events.
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I was also very interested in perhaps going into surgery
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and becoming a surgeon,
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because it meant working with my hands
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in a very focused, intense way.
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So, I started taking art courses,
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and I found a way to make sculpture
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that brought together my love for being very precise with my hands,
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with coming up with different kinds of logical flows of energy through a system.
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And also, working with wire -- everything that I did
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was both a visual and a mechanical engineering decision
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at the same time.
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So, I was able to sort of exercise all of that.
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Now, this kind of machine is as close as I can get to painting.
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And it's full of many little trivial end points,
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like there's a little foot here that just drags around in circles
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and it doesn't really mean anything.
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It's really just for the sort of joy of its own triviality.
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The connection I have with engineering
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is the same as any other engineer, in that I love to solve problems.
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I love to figure things out,
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but the end result of what I'm doing is really completely ambiguous.
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04:21
(Laughter)
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That's pretty ambiguous.
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(Laughter)
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The next piece that is going to come up
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is an example of a kind of machine that is fairly complex.
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I gave myself the problem.
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Since I'm always liking to solve problems,
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I gave myself the problem of turning a crank in one direction,
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and solving all of the mechanical problems
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for getting this little man to walk back and forth.
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So, when I started this, I didn't have an overall plan for the machine,
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but I did have a sense of the gesture,
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and a sense of the shape and how it would occupy space.
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And then it was a matter of starting from one point
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and sort of building to that final point.
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That little gear there switches back and forth to change direction.
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And that's a little found object.
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So a lot of the pieces that I've made,
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they involve found objects.
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And it really -- it's almost like doing visual puns all the time.
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When I see objects, I imagine them in motion.
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I imagine what can be said with them.
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This next one here, "Machine with Wishbone,"
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it came about from playing with this wishbone after dinner.
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You know, they say, never play with your food --
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but I always play with things.
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So, I had this wishbone, and I thought,
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it's kind of like a cowboy who's been on his horse for too long.
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(Laughter)
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And I started to make him walk across the table,
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and I thought, "Oh, I can make a little machine that will do that."
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So, I made this device, linked it up, and the wishbone walks.
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And because the wishbone is bone -- it's animal --
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it's sort of a point where I think we can enter into it.
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And that's the whole piece.
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(Laughter)
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That's about that big.
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(Applause)
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This kind of work is also very much like puppetry,
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where the found object is, in a sense, the puppet,
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and I'm the puppeteer at first, because I'm playing with an object.
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But then I make the machine, which is sort of the stand-in for me,
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and it is able to achieve the action that I want.
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07:03
The next piece I'll show you is a much more conceptual thought,
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and it's a little piece called "Cory's Yellow Chair."
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I had this image in my mind, when I saw my son's little chair,
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and I saw it explode up and out.
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And --
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so the way I saw this in my mind at first,
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was that the pieces would explode up and out with infinite speed,
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and the pieces would move far out,
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and then they would begin to be pulled back
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with a kind of a gravitational feel,
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to the point where they would approach infinite speed back to the center.
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And they would coalesce for just a moment,
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so you could perceive that there was a chair there.
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For me, it's kind of a feeling about the fleetingness of the present moment,
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and I wanted to express that.
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Now, the machine is -- in this case, it's a real approximation of that,
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because obviously you can't move physical matter
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infinitely with infinite speed and have it stop instantaneously.
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This whole thing is about four feet wide,
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and the chair itself is only about a few inches.
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08:18
(Applause)
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Now, this is a funny sort of conceptual thing,
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and yesterday we were talking about Danny Hillis' "10,000 Year Clock."
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So, we have a motor here on the left,
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and it goes through a gear train.
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There are 12 pairs of 50:1 reductions,
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so that means that the final speed of that gear on the end
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is so slow that it would take two trillion years to turn once.
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So I've invented it in concrete, because it doesn't really matter.
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(Laughter)
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Because it could run all the time.
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(Laughter)
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Now, a completely different thought.
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I'm always imagining myself in different situations.
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I'm imagining myself as a machine.
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What would I love?
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I would love to be bathed in oil.
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(Laughter)
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So, this machine does nothing but just bathe itself in oil.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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And it's really, just sort of --
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for me, it was just really about the lusciousness of oil.
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(Laughter)
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And then, I got a call from a friend
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who wanted to have a show of erotic art,
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and I didn't have any pieces.
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But when she suggested to be in the show, this piece came to mind.
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So, it's sort of related, but you can see it's much more overtly erotic.
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And this one I call "Machine with Grease."
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It's just continually ejaculating, and it's --
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(Laughter) --
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this is a happy machine, I'll tell you.
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(Laughter)
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It's definitely happy.
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From an engineering point of view,
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this is just a little four-bar linkage.
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And then again, this is a found object, a little fan that I found.
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And I thought, what about the gesture of opening the fan,
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and how simply could I state something.
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And, in a case like this, I'm trying to make something which is clear
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but also not suggestive of any particular kind of animal or plant.
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For me, the process is very important,
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because I'm inventing machines,
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but I'm also inventing tools to make machines,
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and the whole thing is all sort of wrapped up from the beginning.
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So this is a little wire-bending tool.
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After many years of bending gears with a pair of pliers,
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I made that tool, and then I made this other tool
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for sort of centering gears very quickly --
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sort of developing my own little world of technology.
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My life completely changed when I found a spot welder.
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(Laughter)
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And that was that tool.
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It completely changed what I could do.
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Now here, I'm going to do a very poor job of silver soldering.
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This is not the way they teach you to silver solder when you're in school.
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I just like, throw it in.
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I mean, real jewelers put little bits of solder in.
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So, that's a finished gear.
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When I moved to Boston,
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I joined a group called the World Sculpture Racing Society.
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(Laughter)
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And the idea, their premise was that we wanted to show
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pieces of sculpture on the street,
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and there'd be no subjective decision about what was the best.
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It would be -- whatever came across the finish line first would be the winner.
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(Laughter)
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So I made -- this is my first racing sculpture,
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and I thought, "Oh, I'm going to make a cart,
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and I'm going to have it --
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I'm going to have my hand writing 'faster,'
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so as I run down the street, the cart's going to talk to me
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and it's going to go, 'Faster, faster!' "
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So, that's what it does.
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(Laughter)
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But then in the end, what I decided
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was every time you finish writing the word,
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I would stop and I would give the card to somebody on the side of the road.
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So I would never win the race because I'm always stopping.
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But I had a lot of fun.
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(Applause)
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Now, I only have two and a half minutes -- I'm going to play this.
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This is a piece that, for me, is in some ways
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the most complete kind of piece.
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Because when I was a kid, I also played a lot of guitar.
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And when I had this thought,
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I was imagining that I would make --
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I would have a whole machine theater evening,
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where I would -- you would have an audience,
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the curtain would open, and you'd be entertained by machines on stage.
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So, I imagined a very simple gestural dance
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that would be between a machine and just a very simple chair, and ...
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When I'm making these pieces, I'm always trying to find a point
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where I'm saying something very clearly and it's very simple,
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but also at the same time it's very ambiguous.
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And I think there's a point between simplicity and ambiguity
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which can allow a viewer to perhaps take something from it.
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And that leads me to the thought that all of these pieces
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start off in my own mind, in my heart,
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and I do my best at finding ways to express them with materials,
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and it always feels really crude.
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It's always a struggle,
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but somehow I manage to sort of get this thought
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out into an object, and then it's there, OK.
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It means nothing at all.
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The object itself just means nothing.
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Once it's perceived, and someone brings it into their own mind,
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then there's a cycle that has been completed.
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And to me, that's the most important thing
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because, ever since being a kid, I've wanted to communicate my passion and love.
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And that means the complete cycle of coming from inside,
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out to the physical, to someone perceiving it.
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So I'll just let this chair come down.
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(Applause)
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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