"It's very hard to understand what our reality is." | Artist Julie Mehretu | Louisiana Channel

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  • Опубликовано: 11 июн 2024
  • “Abstract, confused, uncertain.” Meet American painter Julie Mehretu who, in her recent series of Metoikos paintings, tries to reflect the state of our contemporary world.
    “A lot of our assumptions will be challenged”, she says, defining the reality of most people as living in between - of “being and not being” at the same time. “I am in a state of alert, a state of alarm.”
    Asked about the intensity of colour in the Metoiko series, Mehretu states: “Well, we had Trump. You had to do something.”
    Julie Mehretu (b. 1970, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia) lives and works in New York City. She received a B.A. from Kalamazoo College, Michigan, studied at the University Cheikh Anta Diop, Dakar, Senegal, and received a Master’s of Fine Art with honours from The Rhode Island School of Design in 1997.
    In exploring palimpsests of history, from geological time to a modern-day phenomenology of the social, Julie Mehretu's works engage us in a dynamic visual articulation of contemporary experience, a depiction of social behaviour and the psychogeography of space. Mehretu’s work is informed by a multitude of sources, including politics, literature and music. Most recently, her paintings have incorporated photographic images from broadcast media which depict conflict, injustice, and social unrest. Mehretu’s practice in painting, drawing, and printmaking equally assert the role of art to provoke thought and reflection and express the current condition of the individual and society.
    She has received many prestigious awards, including the MacArthur Fellowship in 2005 and the U.S. Department of State Medal of Arts Award in 2015 and membership to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, in 2021. Her work has been exhibited extensively in museums and biennials, including the Carnegie International (2004-05), Sydney Biennial (2006), Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York (2010), dOCUMENTA (13) (2012), Sharjah Biennial (2015), Museu de Arte Contemporânea de Serralves, Porto, Portugal (2017), Kettle's Yard, University of Cambridge, UK (2019); and the 58th International Art Exhibition, La Biennale di Venezia, (2019).
    In November 2019, a career survey opened of Mehretu’s work at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and afterwards travelled to The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; The High Museum, Atlanta; and The Walker Museum of Art, Minneapolis.
    Julie Mehretu was interviewed by Marc-Christoph Wagner in connection with her exhibition Metoikos (in between paintings) at the gallery Carlier Gebauer in Berlin in September 2021.
    Camera: Mark Nichels
    Edited by Signe Boe Pedersen
    Produced by Marc-Christoph Wagner
    Copyright: Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2022
    Louisiana Channel is supported by Den A.P. Møllerske Støttefond, Ny Carlsbergfondet, C.L. Davids Fond og Samling and Fritz Hansen.
    #JulieMehretu #Artist #contemporaryart
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Комментарии • 75

  • @paulwheeler6609
    @paulwheeler6609 Год назад +9

    Incredible work. It's unfortunate most of the "challenges" we are living through are largely self-inflicted, and center around both people's and leaderships lack of vision. The colors and movement are amazing.

  • @liammcooper
    @liammcooper Месяц назад

    One of the most important artists working today. Great points made about abstract art's using the colors/forms of life, as well as about "borderlands" as a state of being. Shakespeare's "The Tempest" is strongly associated with post-colonial studies and that sort of tempestuous/in-between/liminal feeling is definitely felt in uncertain times (politically, environmentally, even regarding global health post-pandemic). Ann Carson's great, i'd also recommend everyone read Mary Barnard's translations of Sappho.

  • @albertoballocca
    @albertoballocca Год назад +1

    "It is not necessary a way of knowing..." incredibly helpful, thank you! 🙏🖌️✨

  • @dear_darling
    @dear_darling Год назад +6

    Always the best art content on RUclips! Love Louisiana Channel

  • @hd-xc2lz
    @hd-xc2lz Год назад +24

    Missing from this video is the amount of actual painting and mark-making Mehretu's assistants do on her paintings. Even more extraordinary is that there is such footage online, she seeming more director than painter.

    • @markymouse007
      @markymouse007 Год назад +3

      Things That Make You Go HMMM🤔

    • @tthomas184
      @tthomas184 Год назад +3

      @@biocykle Some have, some have not. HD didn't say no one has, the comment was on the amount done by assistants.

    • @jackfirmin5814
      @jackfirmin5814 Год назад +2

      valid point. Assistents and similar workers needs more praise...

    • @judilynn9569
      @judilynn9569 Год назад +5

      She follows the traditions of the master painters from the 17th century to today. A painter’s apprentice usually learned by doing the less important parts (backgrounds) of a painting before the master painted in the foreground. At some point, the apprentice gained more responsibility until he was doing his own complete works. But the master’s signature always went on the finished piece and got credit since he was the teacher. Nothing has changed.

    • @tthomas184
      @tthomas184 Год назад +5

      @@judilynn9569 These are not apprentices they are assistants.. Huge difference. An apprentice is a student. An assistant is a person who is already fully trained. Many of these people have Masters degrees. They're there because they need the money.
      But you're right nothing has changed since the 17th century. People still need money and those who have it still exploit those who don't.

  • @LloydBrown-ov4mh
    @LloydBrown-ov4mh Год назад +9

    Really like what she says! This art is music for sure. When the words are not there to trigger the sounds/concepts in the mind then seeing as knowing becomes it's own way of listening. Goes right to the root of beauty as being.

  • @neilerickson3158
    @neilerickson3158 Год назад +1

    My reaction to these large pieces is positive and exciting, Julie is eloquent, cogent and openminded. The aesthetic appeal I find pleasurable. As for the negative comments these are for the meant to be abrasive or fatuous and deserve to stay with the commentators.

  • @StephenS-2024
    @StephenS-2024 Год назад +1

    Really nice!

  • @angelajsacaartistaffiliatedwpl
    @angelajsacaartistaffiliatedwpl Год назад +1

    Beautiful

  • @edwardferry8247
    @edwardferry8247 Год назад

    I felt the cave drawings at the beginning; particularly the coloured one over her left shoulder. In some ways like Bruegel’s with marks in terms of the eye’s fascination.

  • @chris.s.3163
    @chris.s.3163 Год назад

    One of the best painters working right now! Shows the full potential painting obviously allways will have. From cave painting to graphic algorithms. Its not just beautiful it ist hunting with uncertainty. Assistants...? Completely irrelevant for the exceptional quality of this work!

  • @puseletsotsilo
    @puseletsotsilo Год назад +1

    😊😊😊😊😍😍😍😍😍🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰this is beautiful, art is so beautiful, it's a gift that just keeps on giving. This is such a Beautiful work

  • @catherinewhite4313
    @catherinewhite4313 Год назад

    I like her thoughts about felt experience. It isn't about hating Trump. She raises that because that political experience created a certain emotional state. Also the idea of something recognizable emerging from and returning to abstraction.

    • @markymouse007
      @markymouse007 Год назад +1

      Dismal And Depressing were her exact words to describe the last few years with Trump. She's just as blurred and confused as her work. That should have been her synapsis... " I'm a blurred and confused person so therefore my works are blurred and confused". She should have went with that angle during the interview to describe the works. You know why???? Because that's the truth of the matter.

  • @marwinsing
    @marwinsing Год назад

    Moving abstracts seem to have an inexplicable sense of integrity about them. Julie's work has this, and I love her explanations behind what she does.

  • @M0D60
    @M0D60 Год назад

    Good job

    • @markymouse007
      @markymouse007 Год назад +2

      Don't lie. She's done a terrible job and she said nothing but lies and silly people stuff.

    • @markymouse007
      @markymouse007 Год назад +1

      Don't lie to her. She's done nothing but lie and say silly people stuff.

  • @catherinewhite4313
    @catherinewhite4313 Год назад

    Hard to fully get them in this setting. .....want more time

  • @markymouse007
    @markymouse007 Год назад +2

    Dismal And Depressing were her exact words to describe the last few years with Trump. She's just as blurred and confused as her work. That should have been her synapsis... " I'm a blurred and confused person so therefore my works are blurred and confused". She should have went with that angle during the interview to describe the works. You know why???? Because that's the truth of the matter.

    • @AzraelAlpha
      @AzraelAlpha 8 месяцев назад +1

      If you think about it, Art is opinion given form so it would make sense that someone who has trouble grasping reality will present blurry and confusing art pieces.

  • @TD-qi2rw
    @TD-qi2rw Год назад +2

    Are these digital prints..........they look like prints.

  • @computer_in_a_cave2730
    @computer_in_a_cave2730 Год назад +12

    picking out elements of upper-paleolithic cave art in a miasmic conflagration of tortured baby eels about to jump into a seven dimensional cube of tofu while referencing the trump administration has 'rendered' my emotional circuitry in an utterly depressed and forlorn state ~ and yet there is still 4 minutes and 29 seconds left of this glo-rious video left to behold and digest

  • @WhiteCubeOfficial
    @WhiteCubeOfficial Год назад +1

    🤩🤩🤩

  • @kamikazeyazzie
    @kamikazeyazzie Год назад +10

    These paintings look like graffiti art from the '80s. Like paintings by Futura 2000... This kind of style has already been made. And other artists have made better versions of this style. This is sad because her earlier paintings were groundbreaking and full of energy, these paintings just look dull.

  • @JOSEPHCHARLESCOLIN2024
    @JOSEPHCHARLESCOLIN2024 Год назад +2

    Almost graffiti like

  • @tthomas184
    @tthomas184 Год назад +8

    Her early work was dense and riveting, this new work is thin looking and banal. It's also much too big. I think art needs to earn its scale, and these clearly do not. Big for bigness sake is more about market driven work than art. Also, I think it was Matisse who said artists should have their tongues cut out. Listening to her talk, it's what went thru my mind the most. She has interesting ideas, but they just are not being translated into her work. Perfect example is when she said certain colors reference fire. Could have fooled me. Raise your hand if anyone sees fire looking at this work. I don't. She says everything refers to images people already know. No, they look like her own marks.
    Plus she is not and has never been a painter. Her works are colored drawings. There is a huge difference.

    • @KeyDyer
      @KeyDyer Год назад

      *sniffs fart* ahhhh yes; an amazing opinion 😂

    • @KeyDyer
      @KeyDyer Год назад

      She’s doing something called “whatever the hell she wants”, and it doesn’t have to meet your standards.

    • @tthomas184
      @tthomas184 Год назад +2

      @@KeyDyer She can do anything she likes. I'm not obligated to like it.

  • @71rand
    @71rand Год назад

    Like all great artists, her work is centered around her hatred towards Trump. Bravo.

  • @markymouse007
    @markymouse007 Год назад +13

    What A Farce...Lmao. Just Read The Video Description. Too Funny. How The Hell Do You Guys Get All This Pulled From An Interesting Looking Abstract Painting? I Love Abstract Work But When You Try And Tie "Political Views" To It You Lose People. Just Say What It Is....A Beautiful Image. Leave Out The Bullshit About Your World Views. I Know Your Trying To Add Value And Make Yourself Feel Some Type Of Way By Saying This Painting Stands For This Or That. Its Just Not True Though. Makes Out To Be Just Another Weird Trendy Artist. Nice Abstract Works Though. Look Really Nice To Be Honest.

  • @selwynr
    @selwynr Год назад +3

    Yes, it's impossible when you haven't got the right framework. Marxism provides the only lens to accurately view capitalism through, because Marx got it right - and it ain't pretty and capitalism has not fundamentally changed, and it's not "abstract", though certainly we are in a confusing, extended, perhaps terminal, systemic 'interregnum'. Someone hand her Kapital!
    The paintings have an exciting, shifting depth which I like. Shades of Kandinsky and Miro for the digital age, echoing and heralding the collapse of the biosphere.

    • @olivierbolton8683
      @olivierbolton8683 Год назад

      what century are you living in...do you know what led from Marxism..?
      free enterprise is where its at...a place where we can all think freely.
      All you academics are indoctrinated wannabes.

    • @youtastelikered
      @youtastelikered Год назад

      Might want to deepen your Marxism with some Hegel. Her thinking is fine where it is. The complexity isn't so reducible, as nice as that would be. Maybe try some Gillian Rose.

    • @olivierbolton8683
      @olivierbolton8683 Год назад

      @@youtastelikered and what do you think....are you a rose or are you blood! Can't be both!

    • @youtastelikered
      @youtastelikered Год назад

      @@olivierbolton8683 The rose in the cross of the present is blood.

    • @olivierbolton8683
      @olivierbolton8683 Год назад

      ​@@youtastelikered so if you like metaphors indulge yourself to look up Chartres Cathedral La Rosas...and ask what you prefer...the rose in the cross or the rose...

  • @topdeot
    @topdeot Год назад +4

    I don't understand why the need to talk about Trump. As if her art is just not good enough without virtue signaling that she hates Trump. It really undermined everything she said in this video.

    • @AzraelAlpha
      @AzraelAlpha 8 месяцев назад

      Art has been historically used for political and religious reasons. Many times for both.
      Definitely not surprising and I'm sure that people will either just remember the paintings for what they are or they will be forgotten like 99% of all art ever made.

  • @DreamDosage
    @DreamDosage Год назад +3

    Modern art seems to be a cop out… no skill necessary. And this channel perpetuates it. 🤢

    • @catherinewhite4313
      @catherinewhite4313 Год назад

      Not true. To work abstract art has to be based in the principles and elements of art.

  • @OUTBOUND184
    @OUTBOUND184 Год назад +6

    Art should help make sense of the world and/or human nature, not obfuscate it as these....images...do.

    • @renstitulaer5348
      @renstitulaer5348 Год назад +9

      Disregard any notion starting with "art should-"

    • @OUTBOUND184
      @OUTBOUND184 Год назад +7

      @@renstitulaer5348 No, don't. Art must have standards or it becomes as banal as what we see in this video.

    • @OUTBOUND184
      @OUTBOUND184 Год назад +5

      @@nansenscat9315 That may be the stated objective of modern art but it largely fails. Not to mention it's a complete cop out, illustrating nothing more than the artist's lack of ideas or talent, hoping the viewer will fill in the gaps, as we see in this video. Genuinely embarrassing.

    • @markymouse007
      @markymouse007 Год назад +2

      @@OUTBOUND184 Very Well Said...Agreed

    • @markymouse007
      @markymouse007 Год назад +1

      I'm With You On That One.

  • @markymouse007
    @markymouse007 Год назад +12

    Thought The Work Was Actually Really Ascetically Pleasing. Should Have Left The Interview Out Though And Just Showcased The Work. The Artists Comments On The Trump Era And Claiming The "Last Few Years We're Dismal" SMH. Wonder How The Artist Feels About The Biden Era... Maybe She's Just Pandering To A Certain Audience.

    •  Год назад

      Pandering to libs of course. The Biden era is worse.

    • @kaiserirfanstudio
      @kaiserirfanstudio Месяц назад

      agree