Brooklyn Says OY! Brooklyn Responds YO! Deborah Kass at The Brooklyn Museum

Similar documents
Jacob listens to his inner wisdom

Q&A: In Depth: Deborah Kass on Warhol, Painting,

LESSON 21 Expressing Empathy and Understanding for Others

Meet Roberto Lugo, the ceramicist changing the politics of clay

Startle Response. Joyce Ma and Debbie Kim. September 2005

*High Frequency Words also found in Texas Treasures Updated 8/19/11

Who will make the Princess laugh?

The Black Book Series: The Lost Art of Magical Charisma (The Unreleased Volume: Beyond The 4 Ingredients)

Jaume Plensa with Laila Pedro

Little Jackie receives her Call to Adventure

ADAM By Krista Boehnert

Why is Louie Gohmert challenging Boehner for Speaker of the House?

Student Learning Assessment for ART 100 Katie Frank

Little Jack receives his Call to Adventure

how does this collaboration work? is it an equal partnership?

Episode 213 Martial Arts Humor whistlekickmartialartsradio.com

Modern Shakespeare: The Taming of the Shrew

Name Date. Wallflower someone who feels shy and awkward, particularly at a party or dance. Pre-Reading 1) What is the title of our new book?

CHAPTER 3. The Grenade

ACT 1 SCENE 3 JACKSON VALERIE JACKSON JACKSON VALERIE JACKSON JACKSON

JAUME PLENSA with Laila Pedro

Kindergarten-2. September 14-15, Naaman Is Healed. 2 Kings 5 Adventure Bible for Early Readers pg God Heals Our Hearts

GHOSTS By Bradley Walton

ABSS HIGH FREQUENCY WORDS LIST C List A K, Lists A & B 1 st Grade, Lists A, B, & C 2 nd Grade Fundations Correlated

Pedestrian Safer Journey Ages Video Script

Punctuating Personality 1.15

The Talent Store. by Rene Gutteridge. Cash register and table Cash Three colorful sacks of different sizes Three boxes of different sizes

Have You Seen Him? Jason Bullock

Selection Review #1. A Dime a Dozen. The Dream

Barrington Stoke CLASSROOM RESOURCES

Scene 1: The Street.

GAGOSIAN. Ann Binlot So you started this series three years ago? Dan Colen I started the series four or five years ago.

WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW EMT-P ANDRE CHERRINGTON. Interview Date: October 10, 2001

(TO US) I guess my story begins at dinner time. I was late, and my mom, dad and sister were waiting with their usual impatience.

Dark and Purple and Beautiful

As the elevators door slid open they spotted a duffel bag inside. Tommy pick it up and opened it There s a note inside of it I bet its from Robby

A Tomato in the Sun. Applegail Young adult female, dressed in all red with a green leaf as an apple

Transcript of Keith Urban interview with CircaNow radio, recorded June 24, 2011

Name Date Hour To This Day. Pork Chop

SURVIVAL TIPS FOR FAMILY GATHERINGS

Vera Pace (Euva Pace Capps) Interview Recorded: February 18, 2008 Interviewer: David Schenck Transcriptionist: Cathy Mann Date Transcribed: February 2

Trudy Pashe Narrator. Deborah Locke Interviewer. Dakota Tipi First Nation Portage la Prairie, Manitoba, Canada January 19, 2012

If Paris is Burning, Who has the Right to Say So?

-1- It's Up To You: Choose Your Own Adventure

THE TEXT ON THE DRIVE HOME By Bradley Walton

The Kidz Klub 2. The Curse of the Step Dragon

Men Are Funny, Women Are Hilarious... Together We re Hysterical

Standing Tall 1. Standing Tall COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL: DO NOT COPY. Marv Siegel

Cambridge First Certificate (FCE) Sentence Transformations- Same or Different

4. Praise and Worship (10 Minutes) End with CG:Transition Slide

Book, Music and Lyrics by Michelle G. Reiff. Sample Script Pages

EXPRESSIONS FOR DISCUSSION AND DEBATE

Coping Skills Seminars

Diamond Stingily: Doing the Best I Can

A Conversation with Lauren Brennan, Blogger and Recipe Developer Behind Lauren s Latest

Yoshua Okón, still from Octopus (Pulpo), 2011; image courtesy the artist.

What STORIES will you tell your children?

DRAMA SCRIPTS - 3 x 5 minute plays Target audience: 7-11 year olds

Review: Rhetoric. Pseudoreasoning lead us to fallacies. Fallacies: Mistakes in reasoning.

(from the anthem) Lead me back to my home. And all I can say is: Today, if you hear God s voice, do not harden your hearts.

CA09FR008 Lake Buena Vista, Florida July 5, Walt Disney World Mechanical Supervisor Interview July 9, 2009

LESSON 35. Objectives

ENTERTAINMENT MATTERS

Article at

Playing Piano By Ear Practice Guide Chord Style Piano Made Easy

On August 24 Lucie Silvas will release E.G.O., her fourth album and her follow up to her critically-acclaimed and roots-infused Ghosts

Chris: Yeah, I wasn t able to go up a flight of stairs, wasn t able to lay down flat and wasn t able to breathe.

Ebony and her little gang of friends!

AN EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW WITH RINUS VAN DE VELDE // EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT PAINTINGS

Studio Visit: Erin O Keefe

Monologue. Bernie: Dad, if you d let me explain then you ll understand! See, I m spending

Talking About Your Value in Social Situations

Dinosaurs. B. Answer the questions in Hebrew/Arabic. 1. How do scientists know that dinosaurs once lived? 2. Where does the name dinosaur come from?

Jay: Good, good. Yeah. I worked and then I picked up my son. He needed new shoes so we went and got new shoes. And, ah, that was my life today.

Contemporary Scenes for Young Actors

How Startups can stand out from the crowd. Saul Colt Chief Evangelist xero.com

1. Choose to Laugh. Psalm 126:2-3.

High Frequency Word Sheets Words 1-10 Words Words Words Words 41-50

A SMALL, SIMPLE KINDNESS By Bradley Walton

WIFE GOES TO DOCTOR BECAUSE OF HER GROWING CONCERN OVER HER HUSBAND S UNUSUAL BEHAVIOUR.

AB: In a place like Bushwick, the bind is making work. I think with the arts community here, its bind is partying.

I ve been involved in music all my adult life. I didn t plan it that way,

Charly Did It. LEVELED BOOK R Charly Did It. A Reading A Z Level R Leveled Book Word Count: 1,334.

Ten Teases. Learn How to Build Attraction Using Teasing

LISTENING ANSWER KEY. Candidate Number: Task Three: Radio Programme Task One: Short Conversations 1-6. Task Two: Making Notes 7-15

Voices of Lebanon Valley College 150th Anniversary Oral History Project. Lebanon Valley College Archives Vernon and Doris Bishop Library

Magdalena Harris, Carla Treloar, Lisa Maher

1 English Short Stories for Beginners,

Tony, Frank, John Movie Lesson 2 Text

With This Ring. Calvin J Walker

The Top Ten Television Theme Songs of All Time

First Edition Printed by Friesens Corporation in Altona, MB, Canada. February 2017, Job #230345

UNIT 1. The Individual and Society. Neighbours. 3. Complete the sentences with the words below. 1. Write the missing letters.

Sample Copy. Not For Distribution.

october 2016 NO NAME WELCOME BACK

Excerpt from THE REAL PROBLEM by Bruce Kane

How to solve problems with paradox

0510 ENGLISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE

Rashid Johnson on David Hammons, Andy Goldsworthy, and His Own Anxiety of Movement

Mind Formative Evaluation. Limelight. Joyce Ma and Karen Chang. February 2007

Transcription:

Brooklyn Says OY! Brooklyn Responds YO! Deborah Kass at The Brooklyn Museum by Danny Brody November 29, 2018 Artist Deborah Kass s monumental sculpture OY/YO was a phenomenon when it was first installed on Brooklyn Bridge Park s Main Street lawn in 2015. Three years later, the groundbreaking work returns to Brooklyn, as part of a public art activation at the Brooklyn Museum. Joining text-based work by other Brooklyn-based artists Brooklyn Hi-Art!

Machine, Kameelah Janan Rasheed, and Hank Willis Thomas OY/YO has been installed outside the Brooklyn Museum s front entrance in a yearlong residency. Kass s large-scale work (measuring 8 x 17 x 5 ft) was conceived during Obama s first term. About the making of the piece, Kass has said, When I created OY/YO the American promise of equality and fairness was writ in the most diverse administration ever, working to make the country a better place for all. With hate and division now on the rise, it is urgent to see our commonalities, what we share, and what brings us together. I interviewed Deborah Kass on the steps of the Brooklyn Museum in October. Danny Brody: I want to ask you a few things. I want to ask you about, of course, this installation. I want to ask you about Brooklyn, about New York, and about #Jewtude. I want to get to all of that, but first I want to ask you about your work in the past. I m very intrigued by the way that you, I don t want to say appropriate, but I just Deborah Kass: It s the word. DB: Okay, appropriate is the word? DK: Yes. That s the word. DB: Male artist or other artist. What are you trying to accomplish through that work? DK: Can you just give me a ballpark work you re talking about? DB: Well, like the Warhol stuff where you re doing I don t know if it s an homage DK: That was both. It was both. An homage and a critique and it was 25 years ago. When I did that work it was about using a really familiar visual language and inserting myself into the discourse of post-war painting and into Warhol. I used Andy because he was so ubiquitous.

DB: He is ubiquitous. DK: He is. More now than then. DB: Than ever. It s kind of amazing. I remember the show that he did with Basquiat with the Boxing Gloves at Shafrazi s gallery and it was a complete failure. I don t know that when he died he was on a downhill slide, but he definitely his stature grew exponentially. DK: Yes. In 92 when I started that project, he wasn t what he is now. I mean he was Andy, don t get me wrong, and I would say to many people the most important artist of his generation, including me. He wasn t like the market monster he became but the market wasn t the monster

it s become. His ubiquity now has to do with the licensing and talk about appropriation, he s been appropriated by popular culture now. DB: It s kind of appropriate since- DK: It is appropriate. DB: Since he was appropriating other objects for his work. Do you think that s part of the work that you ve done over your career? Perhaps it has to do with women artists taking over the dialogue? DK: Yes. It s about changing the narrative. Making it reflect us or me where we haven t been reflected before. For me, it was using this common language people understood, which was Andy, to do that. DB: Was there other work that you felt like where you were inserting yourself to sort of DK: Yes. The work I did before, and the work I ve done since. Yes. Completely, specifically addresses the histories of post-war painting in particular, and uses various languages to insert my subject matter into it.

DB: Do you think this moment now where we re having a real reckoning with how we treat women in society-people always think that something good is going to come of it and sometimes it doesn t happen that way. Or it takes years or decades or centuries. Do you think something good is going to happen out of this, hopefully? How do you relate that also to the art world? DK: It s a great question. It s really a long answer. I would say it s my third round. I started my twenties with 70s feminism, then we all had a big revival in the early 90s with Women s Action Coalition and the anti-abortion stuff with the Bush, H.W. Bush and Reagan and AIDS, the AIDS crisis, and here we are again. It s a little depressing. I don t understand why this is a fight. I thought we solved it in the 70s. I really did. I was so surprised. This time I m not surprised but boy is it depressing. DB: It s shocking in a way that we re digressing, not digressing but I guess going back to these stages that we thought we wouldn t have to go back to. DK: You know, when there s an assault on voting rights, to me it was clear this is where we were headed because that was 1964, 1965, the Civil Rights Act. To actually have black people disenfranchised systematically now, meant gay marriage was going to be under fire, women

were going to be under fire and I m just appalled. I m just appalled. It s not a great day for us. It s is not a great day for anyone. DB: Yes, the whole this Kavanaugh thing really brought a lot of very ugly stuff right to the top. DK: It s going to be really interesting. My niece is here at the museum, and my other niece is going to be here. They re in their 20s, they grew up here and I m terrified for them, but when you think about the level of outrage that we ve been living with since November 8th, 2016, and every day is another outrage and really outrageous stuff. I m completely worn down by it so I m a wreck. DB: I understand. I remember talking about Trump in the early days and people would say, well, this is as bad as it s going to get, or this the bottom. I recall talking with my friends and we kept saying it s going to get worse because we know this guy from living in New York and being from New York and when he senses blood, he just goes lower and lower and lower. If you just look at the Central Park Five issue, he s still proclaiming that they re guilty even after they were found innocent.

DK: No one voted for him here. 97% of us voted for Hillary because we know her. DB: I vote in the South Bronx and I remember he won the Republican primary. I think it was already pretty much decided by then and he won the Bronx but it was like unanimous or something. It was like eight votes or something. I m exaggerating but DK: It was 10. DB: It could have been 10. You mentioned Brooklyn, let s talk about Brooklyn and maybe let s talk a little bit about the museum and your affinity for Brooklyn and why this installation is here. DK: Can you give me a question? DB: Yes. DK: Can you pitch? I hit it. DB: All right, all right, all right. Why is this installation, why is Brooklyn DK: It s a sculpture. Let s call it a sculpture. It s just a work of art. That it s a sculpture, that it is not a temporary object. It s for real. DB: This is really something big. DK: I m correcting people. Don t call it an installation. DB: No, that s great. I was actually thinking about that on the walk from my car. DK: It s very much a sculpture and it s very much about the history of sculptures. Again, post work sculptures, so it really means something to me that it s just not a minimalism object. DB: Let s get back to Brooklyn. DK: Brooklyn.

DB: Brooklyn. Is there something about Brooklyn that if this sculpture has Brooklyn and the sculpture have an affinity for each other? DK: Well, I think that the way it s been embraced from the first time it was for the first time the sculpture was installed in Dumbo, it was an DB: Which was not an installation

DK: Which is not an installation but it is installed, as sculptures are in places. It was just like an instant magnet for people which was wild because I didn t ever think about that. Right here in Crown Heights or Prospect Heights, almost Crown Heights that it says OY on one side and YO on the other, talks to so many communities not just in Brooklyn. I mean, this would work very well in Miami, it would work very well in LA. It s about communities and it s about multiple communities. DB: How are people reacting to the sculpture? You said that it was an outpouring of love for sculpture. Do you think that part of that is because we are such a mixed culture here and maybe it would be less embraced perhaps in a more homogeneous society? DK: This is our society. This is America and this is New York but again I think particularly with what s going on with immigration, it has a whole another resonance now because the Spanish were a lot so it s not just, Yo, Adrian or yo, yo, yo or street or working class Italian guys or Jewish people saying, Oy. It s Latino and it always was because- Spanish was my second language in high school- because this, Yo, it s like, there s a really famous painting Yo,

Picasso, and it s really important to me. In any urban center in America this would be pertinent because we re all the same mix. We re working-class Whites. We re Black people. We re Latino people. We re Jewish people, and we live together in these cities. It s what makes New York so right, and Brooklyn, so great. DB: So great. I m from here, but I left for a long time, and I came back about seven years ago. I noticed at that time or shortly thereafter, everybody was penning one of those Joan Didion, Goodbye to All That essays. See you around New York, I ve had enough of you. It s too homogeneous, too expensive- DK: Yes. Well, that s all true. DB: Do you live here now? DK: Yes. DB: Do you see yourself ever saying goodbye to all that as far as that goes? DK: I would like to say goodbye to the country, but I don t know where to go. I can t imagine where to go. We just came back from London, everyone is totally freaked out about Brexit. It s the same situation. I mean, it s not the same. Don t say that. That s incorrect. It s their situation that s a mess. The question was always like, where to go, but no, because I m from here. DB: Okay. DK: My sister s house apartment s like, 9th floor looking right down on where we are sitting. DB: That s pretty cool. When I was driving here Just about me for a second. I live in the South Bronx. There s not much going on there. DK: Where are you? DB: I m by Melrose. DK: What s the street number? DB: 164th.

DK: My grandmother had a store on a 170th. DB: Okay. I had a lot of relatives who moved there and I guess- DK: My mother s whole My mother- DB: Whole family? DK: Queens and Bronx. That s my whole family. DB: It s just funny because people keep saying the South Bronx is like the new Brooklyn and all this, and I just really hate when they do that. Why can t a neighborhood have its own identity? You wouldn t say this neighborhood is the new something else, so let s have our own identity. I don t get that. DK: It s just a real estate marketing ploy. That s all it is. You know them. It s just real estate. DB: Sometimes you find people actually saying it like they mean it. Not even thinking about how cynical it is. DK: It is really sad. It is different. I lived in Tribeca my entire adult life till I moved to Brooklyn. Yes, it is homogenized. Then you get over here and it s a little less homogenized. I just came from London. It s the future of cities. I don t know what we can do about it. DB: Let s move on to a happier topic. Seriously, the last thing I wanted to ask you is about the Jewish thing that s #Jewtude. What is it about Jews and Jewishness that you find intriguing or what is the dynamic behind that that you find intriguing? DK: I think that s a weird question. DB: Why is it weird? DK: Because it s like what s intriguing about what you are. It s like intriguing DB: Perhaps intriguing isn t- DK: That s not the word.

DB: No, it s not. What do you find so What would the word be? Fulfilling? DK: No, that s not the word. What s the word? DB: Okay. What would the word be? DK: Interesting? DB: Interesting, worth talking about DK: Well, I think what you really mean is, how does representation of Jewishness work with representation of other identities? I think that s what you mean. DB: That was a great question that you asked of yourself. DK: That I reinterpreted for you? [chuckles] DB: Yes. [laughter] DK: I knew what you meant. DB: Yes. DK: Let me help you. DB: Yes. Thanks. It s good when you do both parts. DK: The question is representation of Jewish identity because it s so infrequent. In the worlds of identity and issues of representation, it s just something that I ve been thinking about for 25 years. It s not all of my work but my work definitely addresses it because why wouldn t it? DB: Well, I guess that says it all right there. Really, really loved doing this. Thanks for your help. Helping me out. Can I just take a picture of you in front of the sculpture? DK: Sure. The sculpture.

DB: Sculpture. [laughter] DK: Not to be confused with the installation. DB: It just seemed like installation- I get what it is but it just seems like it s another way of saying, I wasn t really sure where to put this so now, where it is, is sort of the heart of the sculpture. DK: What do you mean? DB: Like, if it s here, it s an installation because it s site-specific but if you move it somewhere else, then it ll just be a sculpture. DK: But it s been to other places. DB: Right, so, was it an installation there and here it s a sculpture? DK: No, it s a sculpture. DB: A sculpture that flies around? DK: Is Robert Indiana s LOVE a sculpture or an installation? DB: Sculpture. Yes. DK: There you go. That s all you need to know. That s it. No different. DB: Okay. Fair enough. That was easy. DK: That s a sculpture, this is a sculpture. DB: Okay. I ll make it quick. Find article at: https://www.quietlunch.com/deborah-kass/