Adam Savage: My obsession with objects and the stories they tell

292,247 views ・ 2009-03-19

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:16
About four years ago, the New Yorker published an article
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about a cache of dodo bones that was found
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in a pit on the island of Mauritius.
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Now, the island of Mauritius is a small island
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off the east coast of Madagascar
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in the Indian Ocean, and it is the place
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where the dodo bird was discovered
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and extinguished, all within about 150 years.
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Everyone was very excited about this archaeological find,
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because it meant that they might finally be able
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to assemble a single dodo skeleton.
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See, while museums all over the world
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have dodo skeletons in their collection, nobody --
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not even the actual Natural History Museum
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on the island of Mauritius -- has a skeleton that's made
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from the bones of a single dodo.
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Well, this isn't exactly true.
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The fact is, is that the British Museum
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had a complete specimen of a dodo in their collection
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up until the 18th century --
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it was actually mummified, skin and all --
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but in a fit of space-saving zeal,
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they actually cut off the head and they cut off the feet
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and they burned the rest in a bonfire.
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If you go look at their website today,
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they'll actually list these specimens, saying,
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the rest was lost in a fire.
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Not quite the whole truth. Anyway.
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The frontispiece of this article was this photo,
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and I'm one of the people that thinks that Tina Brown
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was great for bringing photos to the New Yorker,
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because this photo completely rocked my world.
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I became obsessed with the object --
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not just the beautiful photograph itself,
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and the color, the shallow depth of field, the detail that's visible,
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the wire you can see on the beak there
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that the conservator used to put this skeleton together --
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there's an entire story here.
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And I thought to myself,
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wouldn't it be great
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if I had my own dodo skeleton?
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(Laughter)
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I want to point out here at this point that
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I've spent my life obsessed
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by objects and the stories that they tell,
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and this was the very latest one.
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So I began looking around for --
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to see if anyone sold a kit,
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some kind of model that I could get,
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and I found lots of reference material, lots of lovely pictures.
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No dice: no dodo skeleton for me. But the damage had been done.
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I had saved a few hundred photos of dodo skeletons
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into my "Creative Projects" folder --
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it's a repository for my brain, everything that I could possibly be interested in.
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Any time I have an internet connection,
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there's a sluice of stuff moving into there,
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everything from beautiful rings to cockpit photos.
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The key that the Marquis du Lafayette sent to George Washington
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to celebrate the storming of the Bastille.
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Russian nuclear launch key:
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The one on the top is the picture of the one I found on eBay;
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the one on the bottom is the one I made for myself,
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because I couldn't afford the one on eBay.
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Storm trooper costumes. Maps of Middle Earth --
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that's one I hand-drew myself. There's the dodo skeleton folder.
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This folder has 17,000 photos --
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over 20 gigabytes of information --
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and it's growing constantly.
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And one day, a couple of weeks later, it might have been
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maybe a year later, I was in the art store with my kids,
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and I was buying some clay tools -- we were going to have a craft day.
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I bought some Super Sculpeys, some armature wire, some various materials.
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And I looked down at this Sculpey, and I thought,
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maybe,
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yeah, maybe I could make my own dodo skull.
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I should point out at this time -- I'm not a sculptor;
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I'm a hard-edged model maker.
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You give me a drawing, you give me a prop to replicate,
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you give me a crane, scaffolding, parts from "Star Wars" --
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especially parts from "Star Wars" --
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I can do this stuff all day long.
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It's exactly how I made my living for 15 years.
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But you give me something like this --
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my friend Mike Murnane sculpted this;
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it's a maquette for "Star Wars, Episode Two" --
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this is not my thing --
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this is something other people do -- dragons, soft things.
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However, I felt like I had looked at enough photos of dodo skulls
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to actually be able to
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understand the topology and perhaps replicate it --
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I mean, it couldn't be that difficult.
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So, I started looking at the best photos I could find.
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I grabbed all the reference,
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and I found this lovely piece of reference.
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This is someone selling this on eBay;
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it was clearly a woman’s hand, hopefully a woman's hand.
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Assuming it was roughly the size of my wife's hand,
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I made some measurements of her thumb, and I scaled them out to the size of the skull.
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I blew it up to the actual size, and I began using that,
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along with all the other reference that I had, comparing it to it
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as size reference for figuring out exactly how big the beak should be,
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exactly how long, etc.
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And over a few hours, I eventually achieved
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what was actually a pretty reasonable dodo skull. And I didn't mean to continue, I --
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it's kind of like, you know, you can only clean a super messy room
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by picking up one thing at a time; you can't think about the totality.
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I wasn't thinking about a dodo skeleton;
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I just noticed that as I finished this skull,
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the armature wire that I had been used to holding it up
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was sticking out of the back just where a spine would be.
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And one of the other things I'd been interested in and obsessed with over the years
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is spines and skeletons, having collected a couple of hundred.
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I actually understood the mechanics
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of vertebrae enough to kind of start to imitate them.
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And so button by button,
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vertebrae by vertebrae, I built my way down.
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And actually, by the end of the day, I had a reasonable skull,
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a moderately good vertebrae and half of a pelvis.
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And again, I kept on going, looking for more reference,
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every bit of reference I could find -- drawings, beautiful photos.
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This guy -- I love this guy! He put a dodo leg bones on a scanner
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with a ruler.
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This is the kind of accuracy that I wanted,
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and I
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replicated every last bone and put it in.
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And after about six weeks,
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I finished, painted, mounted
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my own dodo skeleton.
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You can see that I even made a museum label for it
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that includes a brief history of the dodo.
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And TAP Plastics made me -- although I didn't photograph it --
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a museum vitrine.
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I don't have the room for this in my house,
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but I had to finish what I had started.
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And this actually represented kind of a sea change to me.
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Again, like I said, my life has been about
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being fascinated by objects and the stories that they tell,
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and also making them for myself, obtaining them,
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appreciating them and diving into them.
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And in this folder, "Creative Projects,"
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there are tons of projects that I'm currently working on,
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projects that I've already worked on, things that I might want to work on some day,
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and things that I may just want to find and buy and have
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and look at and touch.
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But now there was potentially this new category of things
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that I could sculpt
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that was different, that I -- you know,
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I have my own R2D2, but that's --
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honestly, relative to sculpting, to me, that's easy.
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And so I went back and looked through my "Creative Projects" folder,
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and I happened across the Maltese Falcon.
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Now, this is funny for me:
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to fall in love with an object from a Hammett novel,
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because if it's true that the world is divided into two types of people,
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Chandler people and Hammett people, I am absolutely a Chandler person.
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But in this case,
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it's not about the author, it's not about the book or the movie or the story,
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it's about the object in and of itself.
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And in this case, this object is --
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plays on a host of levels.
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First of all, there's the object in the world.
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This is the "Kniphausen Hawk."
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It is a ceremonial pouring vessel
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made around 1700 for a Swedish Count,
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and it is very likely the object from which
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Hammett drew his inspiration for the Maltese Falcon.
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Then there is the fictional bird, the one that Hammett created for the book.
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Built out of words, it is the engine
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that drives the plot of his book and also the movie,
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in which another object is created:
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a prop that has to represent the thing that Hammett created out of words,
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inspired by the Kniphausen Hawk, and this represents the falcon in the movie.
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And then there is this fourth level, which is
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a whole new object in the world:
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the prop made for the movie, the representative of the thing,
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becomes, in its own right,
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a whole other thing,
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a whole new object of desire.
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And so now it was time to do some research.
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I actually had done some research
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a few years before -- it's why the folder was there.
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I'd bought a replica, a really crappy replica,
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of the Maltese Falcon on eBay,
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and had downloaded enough pictures to actually
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have some reasonable reference.
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But I discovered,
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in researching further,
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really wanting precise reference, that
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one of the original lead birds
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had been sold at Christie's in 1994,
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and so I contacted an antiquarian bookseller
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who had the original Christie's catalogue,
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and in it I found this magnificent picture,
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which included a size reference.
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I was able to scan the picture, blow it up to exactly full size.
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I found other reference. Avi [Ara] Chekmayan,
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a New Jersey editor, actually found this
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resin Maltese Falcon
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at a flea market in 1991,
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although it took him five years
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to authenticate this bird to
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the auctioneers' specifications,
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because there was a lot of controversy about it.
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It was made out of resin, which wasn't a common material for movie props
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about the time the movie was made.
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It's funny to me that it took a while to authenticate it,
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because I can see it compared to this thing,
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and I can tell you -- it's real, it's the real thing,
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it's made from the exact same mold that this one is.
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In this one, because the auction was actually so controversial,
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Profiles in History, the auction house that sold this --
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I think in 1995 for about 100,000 dollars --
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they actually included -- you can see here on the bottom --
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not just a front elevation, but also
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a side, rear
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and other side elevation.
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So now, I had all the topology I needed
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to replicate the Maltese Falcon.
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What do they do, how do you start something like that? I really don't know.
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So what I did was, again, like I did with the dodo skull,
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I blew all my reference up to full size,
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and then I began cutting out the negatives and using
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those templates as shape references.
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So I took Sculpey, and I built a big block of it,
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and I passed it through until, you know, I got the right profiles.
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And then slowly, feather by feather, detail by detail,
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I worked out and achieved --
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working in front of the television and Super Sculpey --
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here's me sitting next to my wife --
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it's the only picture I took of the entire process.
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As I moved through, I achieved
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a very reasonable facsimile of the Maltese Falcon.
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But again, I am not a sculptor,
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and so I don't know a lot of the tricks, like,
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I don't know how my friend Mike gets beautiful, shiny surfaces with his Sculpey;
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I certainly wasn't able to get it.
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So, I went down to my shop,
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and I molded it and I cast it in resin,
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because in the resin, then, I could absolutely get the glass smooth finished.
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Now there's a lot of ways to fill and get yourself a nice smooth finish.
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My preference is about 70 coats of this --
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matte black auto primer.
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I spray it on for about three or four days, it drips to hell,
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but it allows me a really, really nice gentle sanding surface
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and I can get it glass-smooth.
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Oh, finishing up with triple-zero steel wool.
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Now, the great thing about getting it to this point was that
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because in the movie, when they finally bring out the bird at the end,
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and they place it on the table, they actually spin it.
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So I was able to actually
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screen-shot and freeze-frame to make sure.
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And I'm following all the light kicks on this thing and making sure that as I'm holding the light
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in the same position, I'm getting the same type of reflection on it --
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that's the level of detail I'm going into this thing.
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I ended up with this: my Maltese Falcon.
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And it's beautiful. And I can state with authority
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at this point in time, when I'd finished it,
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of all of the replicas out there -- and there is a few --
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this is by far the most accurate
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representation of the original Maltese Falcon
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than anyone has sculpted. Now the original one, I should tell you,
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is sculpted by a guy named Fred Sexton.
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This is where it gets weird.
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Fred Sexton was a friend of this guy, George Hodel.
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Terrifying guy -- agreed by many to be the killer
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of the Black Dahlia.
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Now, James Ellroy believes
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that Fred Sexton, the sculptor of the Maltese Falcon,
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killed James Elroy's mother.
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I'll go you one stranger than that: In 1974,
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during the production of a weird comedy sequel to "The Maltese Falcon,"
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called "The Black Bird," starring George Segal,
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the Los Angeles County Museum of Art
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had a plaster original of the Maltese Falcon --
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one of the original six plasters, I think, made for the movie --
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stolen out of the museum. A lot of people thought
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it was a publicity stunt for the movie.
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John's Grill, which actually
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is seen briefly in "The Maltese Falcon,"
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is still a viable San Francisco eatery,
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counted amongst its regular customers Elisha Cook,
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who played Wilmer Cook in the movie,
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and he gave them
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one of his original plasters of the Maltese Falcon.
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And they had it in their cabinet for about 15 years,
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until it got stolen
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in January of 2007.
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It would seem that the object of desire
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only comes into its own by disappearing repeatedly.
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So here I had this Falcon,
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and it was lovely. It looked really great,
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the light worked on it really well,
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it was better than anything that I could achieve
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or obtain out in the world.
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But there was a problem. And the problem was that:
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I wanted the entirety of the object,
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I wanted the weight behind the object.
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This thing was made of resin and it was too light.
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There's this group online that I frequent.
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It's a group of prop crazies just like me
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called the Replica Props Forum, and it's people who trade,
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make and travel in information about movie props.
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And it turned out that one of the guys there,
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a friend of mine that I never actually met,
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but befriended through some prop deals, was the manager of a local foundry.
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He took my master Falcon pattern,
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he actually did lost wax casting
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in bronze for me,
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and this is the bronze I got back.
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And this is, after some acid etching, the one that I ended up with.
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And this thing, it's deeply, deeply satisfying to me.
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Here, I'm going to put it out there,
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later on tonight, and
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I want you to pick it up and handle it.
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You want to know
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how obsessed I am. This project's only for me,
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and yet I went so far as to buy on eBay
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a 1941 Chinese San Francisco-based newspaper,
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in order so that the bird could properly be wrapped ...
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like it is in the movie.
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(Laughter)
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Yeah, I know!
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(Laughter) (Applause)
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There you can see, it's weighing in at 27 and a half pounds.
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That's half the weight of my dog, Huxley.
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But there's a problem.
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Now, here's the most recent progression of Falcons.
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On the far left is a piece of crap -- a replica I bought on eBay.
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There's my somewhat ruined Sculpey Falcon,
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because I had to get it back out of the mold. There's my first casting,
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there's my master and there's my bronze.
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There's a thing that happens when you mold and cast things,
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which is that every time you throw it into silicone and cast it in resin,
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you lose a little bit of volume, you lose a little bit of size.
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And when I held my bronze one up against my Sculpey one,
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it was shorter by three-quarters of an inch.
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Yeah, no, really, this was like aah --
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why didn't I remember this?
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Why didn't I start and make it bigger?
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So what do I do? I figure I have two options.
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One, I can fire a freaking laser at it,
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which I have already done,
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to do a 3D scan -- there's a 3D scan of this Falcon.
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I had figured out the exact amount of shrinkage I achieved
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going from a wax master to a bronze master
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and blown this up big enough to make
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a 3D lithography master of this,
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which I will polish, then I will send to the mold maker
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and then I will have it done in bronze. Or:
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There are several people who own originals,
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and I have been attempting to contact them and reach them,
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hoping that they will let me spend a few minutes
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in the presence of one of the real birds, maybe to take a picture,
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or even to pull out the hand-held laser scanner
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that I happen to own that fits inside a cereal box,
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and could maybe, without even touching their bird, I swear,
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get a perfect 3D scan. And I'm even willing to sign pages
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saying that I'll never let anyone else have it, except for me in my office, I promise.
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I'll give them one if they want it.
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And then, maybe, then I'll achieve the end of this exercise.
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But really, if we're all going to be honest with ourselves,
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I have to admit that achieving the end of the exercise
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was never the point of the exercise to begin with, was it.
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Thank you.
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About this website

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