Alex Da Corte: 57 Varieties | Art21 "Extended Play"

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  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2018
  • Episode 260: At work on his installation for the 57th edition of the Carnegie International in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Alex Da Corte films a series of fifty-seven videos that combine personal narrative, art-historical references, and television characters, to create a contemporary portrait of America. Drawn to misunderstood and colorful characters, Da Corte is shown portraying Sesame Street puppeteer Caroll Spinney, the Wicked Witch of the West, the Statue of Liberty, the Pink Panther, and Mr. Rogers. Da Corte juxtaposes, remixes, and flattens these disparate images in order to tell new stories with familiar characters.
    Filming at his studio in Philadelphia and a soundstage in New Jersey, Da Corte enlists a team of artists to create the one-of-a-kind makeup, costumes, and props. “We as a studio all really value material,” explains Da Corte, describing the hours that go into sewing costumes, building sets, and working with neon. Da Corte’s parents, siblings, nieces and nephews also join him on set, helping with the painting of an enormous rose lattice inspired by his grandmother. “My family is all I have; my family is everything to me,” says Da Corte.
    Titled “Rubber Pencil Devil,” the final series of fifty-seven videos are installed within a glowing house built with colorful neon lights, inspired by Da Corte’s time spent drawing at a diner during art school. This dreamlike, immersive environment draws viewers in and evokes a range of reactions, from joy to desire to disgust. Da Corte’s images are paired with the words from Bob Dylan’s 1965 “Subterranean Homesick Blues” video and the artist wonders, “fifty years later, maybe this is a similar moment, in need of some empathetic conversation and maybe if I use [Dylan’s] words and pair them with my images, I might make sense of America.”
    Alex Da Corte creates vibrant and immersive large-scale installations that include wall-based works, sculptures, and videos. Colorful and surreal, his work combines personal narrative, art-historical references, pop-culture characters, and the glossy aesthetics of commercial advertising to reveal the humor, absurdity, and psychological complexity of the images and stories that pervade our culture. Da Corte’s juxtaposition, remixing, and flattening of disparate images and icons detaches them from their original meanings, allowing him to tell new stories about familiar characters, with a mixture of empathy, criticism, comedy, and the macabre.
    Learn more about the artist at:
    art21.org/artist/alex-da-corte/
    CREDITS | Producer: Ian Forster. Interview: Ian Forster. Editor: Morgan Riles. Field Producer: Tina Kukielski. Camera: Jarred Alterman. Sound: Shapoor Pourshariati. Production Assistant: Adedoyin Pedro. Artwork Courtesy: Alex Da Corte & Karma Gallery. Music: Annie Clark & Austin Fisher. Special Thanks: All Ages Productions, Carnegie Museum of Art, Da Corte Family, Da Corte Studio Team, Hill Theatre Studio, Scott Ross, & Cara Yarmolowicz.
    This film is possible thanks to the Arts, Equity & Education Fund. Additional support is provided by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council; the Art21 Contemporary Council; and by individual contributors.
    TRANSLATIONS
    Translated subtitles are generously contributed by our volunteer translation community. Visit our translation team at Amara for the full list of contributors:
    amara.org/en/videos/2CrSmWkAF...
    #AlexDaCorte #Art21 #Art21ExtendedPlay
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Комментарии • 39

  • @OngoingBox
    @OngoingBox 28 дней назад

    loved this piece. hard to capture its impact in a different medium. it was really magical.

  • @BobPagani
    @BobPagani 5 лет назад +28

    I kept thinking, "How do you get funding for a project like this?"

  • @Phresche
    @Phresche Год назад +2

    This is the guy that does some of Tierra whacks music videos.. you are amazing and Creative is an understatement!! I choose you!

  • @WorldFungusChamp
    @WorldFungusChamp 5 лет назад +32

    First thing that I thought about while watching this was "how much does he pay his assistants?"

  • @32sashu
    @32sashu 3 года назад +7

    Terra whack anybody?👀 Lovin his work!

  • @HowTo4Uvideos
    @HowTo4Uvideos 5 лет назад +7

    Saw this during the closing weekend at the Carnegie a couple weeks ago and loved it. You couldn't take your eyes off of it and kept wanting to see the next video.

  • @acupoftea3476
    @acupoftea3476 Год назад +1

    I absolutely love this!! I think Jim Henson sees this, and smiles 🥹

  • @wristsinside
    @wristsinside 5 лет назад +3

    Love you and miss you, Alex. Glad you're still working and making beautiful art!!!

  • @wowhuhmike
    @wowhuhmike 3 года назад +1

    This brought tears to my eyes. First time learning of this artist. So grateful to find this, actually to be brought this, thank you RUclips auto play.

    • @art21org
      @art21org  3 года назад

      Thank you for sharing. We're so glad that you were able to discover Alex Da Corte's work.

  • @terimattal9057
    @terimattal9057 Год назад

    What a joy to run across!!!
    Thanks so much

  • @chris__hodson
    @chris__hodson 5 лет назад +1

    Utterly brilliant.

  • @CannabisUseOnly
    @CannabisUseOnly 3 года назад +2

    Saw this at the DMA recently and loved every minute of it. So well done.

  • @MrBamboo9
    @MrBamboo9 5 лет назад +1

    Stunning

  • @RR-ob8ze
    @RR-ob8ze Год назад +1

    I think it’s dope (: people complaining about exuberant funding wouldn’t know what to do with large funds anyways. This guy did a great job with the opportunity he was given. Congrats to him 😊

  • @PhoebesWorldProductions
    @PhoebesWorldProductions 5 лет назад

    Oh so COOL!!! =)
    LOVE this work. =)

  • @LucasBostrom100
    @LucasBostrom100 5 лет назад

    That was amazing

  • @danparkstudio
    @danparkstudio 5 лет назад +5

    Genius, I am truly inspired.

  • @joewalsh.studio
    @joewalsh.studio 3 года назад +1

    He sounds like Eric Wareheim

  • @jericencarnacion5720
    @jericencarnacion5720 4 года назад +1

    acid trip !!!!!!

  • @ZetaReticulian
    @ZetaReticulian 2 года назад +2

    …. Self important intellectual drooling 🤤

  • @eliasthecreative422
    @eliasthecreative422 5 лет назад +1

    There are way to many good artist for you guys not to have lots more videos

  • @Aisperwin
    @Aisperwin 5 лет назад +14

    I appreciate art like this but something about artist with thousands of dollars and can make anything with any resources bugs me. I could make some cool shit too if I have 200 grand to invest into any idea...

    • @piemakerproductions
      @piemakerproductions 4 года назад +1

      Totally Agree. I think we need to make money and people with it un-cool again.

    • @cn1506
      @cn1506 4 года назад

      That's always been the art world and its bothered me a bit. Even the classics we look back on were commissioned by the rich and then the artists (commonly also rich) would do the work, or worse: command their crews to do it. From a source on the inside, Dave Chihuly (famous glass artist) doesn't blow glass anymore but its all still called Chihuly Glass. An artist who spends all their time on art is not as interesting to me as a "well rounded" person. Its like people within fashion posting pictures of their fashion. Not exciting in the least because its to be assumed they dress well, I'm interested in the fact that Robin Williams was one of the best comedians/performers in the world but was also into streetwear.

    • @Aisperwin
      @Aisperwin 4 года назад +1

      C N I understand some works are bigger than one guy. To create a vision you need the help of others. Just frustrating to see these guys constantly on a pedestal. Really gives a false impression of what the art world is really like.

    • @dryerjd
      @dryerjd 2 года назад

      Then do it

    • @Aisperwin
      @Aisperwin 2 года назад

      @@dryerjd cool you got 100000000 dollars i can have?

  • @ninadubois2842
    @ninadubois2842 5 лет назад +5

    Wish I could experience this art without the artist's narrative.

  • @tzutzescu
    @tzutzescu 5 лет назад +5

    american consumerism at it's finest. take away the editing and you are left with some neons and ppl in costumes that try to justify the thousands of dollars wasted. at the end of the day it's nicely wrapped and narrated *shit*.

    • @cn1506
      @cn1506 4 года назад +3

      Take the editing away from any film, music, piece of art you've ever seen and you have a pile of useless materials and millions more dollars wasted. Grow your tastes a little.

    • @tzutzescu
      @tzutzescu 4 года назад

      @@cn1506 lol, really? how do you take away editing from a painting in a museum or a live theater play, or a live concert? did you even understand what i said? i was talking about the editing of this particular video, about how they try to "sell" it as something amazing, when at the end of the day it's just what i said above.
      if they have to "explain" it to you, it's more likely shit in a pretty package.
      also "grow your tastes a little"? .. that's exactly what someone who endorses this crap would say to justify it. way to own the stereotype

    • @BobPagani
      @BobPagani 2 года назад +1

      Your entire "argument" reduces down to "If I don't like it or understand it, it's shit."

    • @LAST_STAND_FAN
      @LAST_STAND_FAN Год назад

      Blud is actually spitting nothing but facts.

  • @Dsexh_dsexh
    @Dsexh_dsexh 3 года назад +1

    First thoughts always “omg the funds”, 2nd thought is on the comment “my family is my life”. That’s terrible, that’s fucked up, fuck your family, your life is your own, when people say “my family is my life” I just think of people being indoctrinated into a cult. It’s not healthy