Joshua & Zachary Sandler / aluCine 2009

2015

Joshua and Zachary are Brooklyn based artists who come from distinct creative backgrounds – Zachary is trained in modern drama and performance while Joshua studied photography and video. As teenagers the two brothers began collaborating on photography projects as a means to subvert a reality marked by alienating social constructs and a dysfunctional family. These early works, steeped in adolescent psychosexual energy, documented the fantasy, inhibition and intimacy shared between family and close friends.Joshua and Zachary are Brooklyn based artists who come from distinct creative backgrounds – Zachary is trained in modern drama and performance while Joshua studied photography and video. As teenagers the two brothers began collaborating on photography projects as a means to subvert a reality marked by alienating social constructs  …

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0:00

we are here at a lucini as curators but

0:03

also we have this funny we have a few of

0:07

our videos in a few different programs

0:09

we curated a program called reduced

0:13

polish which is all New York City

0:14

artists and film them some filmmakers to

0:18

and and we’re presenting that tonight

0:21

but on the first night Kiki nickel Ella

0:24

from Brazil I had one of our pieces in

0:27

her presentation of a video art piece we

0:30

had made and then though also there’s

0:33

the exquisite corpse video project which

0:35

we are participants in him which with a

0:38

screen at V tape on Wednesday I believe

0:40

that’s right we also pursued to

0:43

participated in the Ellis in a festival

0:45

last year and we were lucky enough to

0:48

come back this year having really just

0:51

had a wonderful time last year and just

0:53

really happy to be back here yeah our

0:57

video projects I think have come a long

0:59

way we started making videos together

1:01

about about five years ago but our work

1:04

together in terms of collaborating

1:06

really goes back to our adolescence when

1:09

we really were doing a lot of

1:11

photography together and just kind of

1:13

exploring with kind of

1:16

just the camera using starting with

1:19

still photographs and very personal work

1:23

that I’ve touched on a lot of different

1:26

issues insecurity feeling alienated and

1:29

alone we come from like suburban

1:34

American culture lots of not a bit not

1:38

the most interesting place to grow up

1:41

like in the suburbs in America and so

1:44

maybe we were different and didn’t feel

1:49

like I didn’t fit in so much so we we

1:51

started using art as a way to kind of do

1:54

her own thing and find a little bit of a

1:56

voice that we couldn’t find in the

1:59

typical things that were happening

2:00

around us so we started to do

2:03

photographs that were very dark and

2:06

talking about the sort of stuff flying

2:09

around up in our heads and then that we

2:12

got the video and that that we try to

2:16

take we were doing photographs and put

2:17

it some of those same things in the

2:20

video and that takes us to where we are

2:22

now I think originally our work was a

2:26

lot about about us in terms of our form

2:31

or what not just depicting ourselves and

2:33

then throughout time I think we’ve grown

2:36

a lot more comfortable with just finding

2:38

other people who we share similar kind

2:41

of values with and just a similar sort

2:44

of

2:47

sense of a similar sense of just kind of

2:53

feeling somewhat lost within an

2:57

environment and needing some way to

3:00

communicate like this kind of world

3:03

that’s happening inside that just like

3:06

you know so on this video that we have

3:09

in this program tonight that we actually

3:12

curated is a good example of another

3:14

person who I actually came across in

3:17

college he’s a good friend of mine from

3:19

college who is uh a lot of someone a lot

3:23

of people would probably think it was a

3:24

pretty troubled person but he’s

3:27

incredibly functional and I think it’s a

3:30

really poignant portrayal of kind of

3:33

what we’re driving at in terms of

3:39

I think that our stuff the stuff we were

3:43

doing before like last year when I osuni

3:46

was more performance based video art and

3:48

now we’re working in a our stuff now

3:51

it’s more removing in a direction that’s

3:53

kind of a combination of video art and

3:56

documentary and we for a long time

3:59

looked at ourselves and our problems in

4:00

our you know the shadows around us and

4:04

now we’re looking at other people too

4:06

and and it’s it’s something there’s a

4:12

lot of its it’s good to be it to be

4:17

expanding to now like to see that

4:19

there’s you know other people who see

4:21

things like us and to try to show them

4:24

but it’s very important to us to show

4:26

people the way they are I think that

4:28

sometimes artists find somebody who’s

4:30

up or nuts and they want to make

4:33

a video about them or art piece and they

4:36

can put their own they can put their own

4:39

kind of they see that they shape the

4:44

person in a way that suits them but to

4:46

us is very important for us to store the

4:47

person the way they really are not to

4:49

not to shape people to how we want them

4:54

to see scene but to to represent the

4:58

person as they’re you know the way their

5:00

brain actually is rather than the way we

5:02

think it will we would not just not to

5:05

stylize it we’re really not into like

5:07

over stylizing thing which is one thing

5:09

that thing’s a big problem or right now

5:11

in general and other you know film and

5:15

stuff too that you know stylization is I

5:17

think it takes away the power of things

5:19

so we we’ve made a decision to as we

5:22

continue to grow to not get to keep

5:25

things very simple you know to not get

5:28

to not to try to make style something

5:31

that um to keep that distance so that

5:35

being stay kind of pure and raw and what

5:38

they really are and

5:40

that’s important to us we think that’s

5:42

the presentation that we’re showing

5:44

tonight we we specifically try to fire

5:46

artists who are doing that too and

5:47

thankfully we’ve we’ve been living in

5:49

New York a long time we have a we are

5:53

part of a community of artists who are

5:55

very who we think are very talented and

5:57

who we have similar ideals with and we

6:00

were able to pick some really strong

6:03

work and some very talented people and

6:05

good people you know good good

6:07

individuals and that’s so that’s what we

6:13

did yeah I think it’s interesting

6:15

because it similarly in the way that

6:18

we’ve kind of taken the focus and kind

6:23

of and kind of focused outward a little

6:27

bit more i think it’s it’s it’s made it

6:30

much more of a social activity actually

6:33

the artistic process and kind of

6:35

involving other people and it’s it’s

6:38

kind of a big part of the for me the

6:41

kind of catharsis of making marcus just

6:44

finding other people who identify with

6:45

what you’re doing and kind of sharing

6:48

creatively in in terms of creating this

6:51

program i think that really is is kind

6:54

of it’s just important in terms of how

6:57

this this came about is that throughout

7:00

the process of making work you find

7:02

people who you know who understand your

7:06

work or with whom it resonates and then

7:09

it goes to the next step where you

7:11

actually begin to to work together to a

7:14

certain degree so that’s really the

7:15

whole community and social aspect of it

7:17

is really really integral to Josh and I

7:21

think both that yet we kind of nurture

7:25

that relationship and those relations

7:27

yeah in a lucinei was a very very

7:31

important event for us last year because

7:34

i think we had been a little not so

7:37

optimistic about our own community in

7:40

New York you know in New York is very

7:42

big city with a lot of people trying

7:43

to to make some progress and it can be

7:46

very like feel like you’re on your own

7:49

there and we came here and we saw what a

7:51

strong community of artists came here

7:53

and the people coming from other scenes

7:55

with the people here in Toronto and what

7:57

and now how much it seemed like they

7:59

were supporting each other and I think

8:01

we went back home and then for some

8:03

reason we became aware that we actually

8:05

did have a lot of people who we felt

8:08

that way about who we you know who we’re

8:10

not just about themselves but about

8:12

working together with people with

8:14

similar feelings about art and you know

8:18

what the most important things are you

8:20

know not just benefit yourself but

8:22

working with people you know being

8:24

collaborative and trying to make good

8:27

things happen it’s supporting each other

8:28

and so we came so we that from LLC that

8:32

sort of started some frosted where we

8:34

actually really became much more aware

8:38

of our community and and we were lucky

8:41

enough to have or I asked us to carry

8:42

this program and we these are the people

8:45

we’re using for this program and it’s a

8:47

I’m very proud of all the people and I

8:49

think it’s really talented people we

8:52

have we have a mix there’s some people

8:54

who are from film background those are

8:56

people who are from performance art

8:58

background some people who are doing

9:00

sort of narrative video art and

9:04

everything in between the program starts

9:07

with a short film by Jonathan couette

9:09

who is a filmmaker who his movie

9:13

tarnation was a very very famous very

9:16

amazing film about his schizophrenic mom

9:19

and his life which is very challenging

9:22

and he made a 42 second short film which

9:26

is kind of a dark abstract film which is

9:28

I think it’s amazing and it’s how we

9:30

begin the program and then we have the

9:33

beginning section is a lot of videos

9:35

that are either kind of performance or

9:38

very very um not linear very more

9:43

abstract in there in the way they um

9:46

the narrative is very abstract in the

9:49

beginning yeah we have a Noah Dodson

9:53

who’s a Danish filmmaker limit or artist

9:57

living in New York and his piece is a

10:00

very sexual and very dark and talking

10:04

about it’s sort of like a revealing like

10:06

childhood issues with sex and it’s good

10:11

and then we have um we have let’s think

10:14

we have will you wanna say something

10:18

about the fact that a lot of these

10:19

people are students of of Allen frames

10:22

let’s say that after okay let’s get the

10:25

Charter thing about some of the videos I

10:26

thing on there’s 11 dahvie Wanda V who’s

10:30

a Colombian artist living in New York

10:33

who is very whose works totally stop

10:36

motion animation it does some very

10:38

interesting things a sort of nightmarish

10:41

and sexual and in his videos in there in

10:45

the beginning Flula liliana velas also a

10:50

Colombian artist living in New York

10:52

who’s up here with us today is her video

10:55

isn’t it and it’s also sort of a dark

10:57

look at a sexuality and very personal

11:02

but funny too which is important to us

11:05

that people have a sense of humor about

11:07

their dark dark things happening inside

11:11

of them mm-hmm there’s a video by Maria

11:13

pecheneg who’s a who’s a really great

11:17

Austrian performance artist and video

11:20

artists who we met in New York and again

11:23

I think our work and our work just kind

11:26

of flute resonated and we fostered a

11:30

really great relationship and she just I

11:31

think she deals with her own body and

11:36

her identity within the context of our

11:38

childhood and

11:39

kind of using kind of grotesque aspects

11:43

of her own form and kind of challenging

11:45

the audience and she’s doing some really

11:47

interesting stuff new york that were

11:49

really yeah she were very proud of her

11:50

she’s doing very good and her work is

11:52

really growing and she’s a her

11:55

performances are becoming pretty pretty

11:57

impressive and she’s a very very

11:59

talented artist and wells do we have we

12:03

have josh sanchez who’s a filmmaker who

12:10

lives in New York who’s doing these

12:11

short vignettes about people’s memories

12:14

that are very great he films them on a

12:17

super 8 camera and then transfers them

12:20

to video using a projector and it’s very

12:23

raw very simple we have Jake cell videos

12:27

a friend of ours who comes from a

12:30

photography background but is now doing

12:33

he basically doesn’t kind of cut up

12:35

videos where he takes interviews with

12:37

his mother and father who had a very

12:39

bitter divorce and all this experience

12:41

most of them whom he is did not really

12:44

have good endings to the relationships

12:47

with and he’ll interview them about the

12:49

relationship and he’ll cut it up in a

12:51

way that it’s very abrupt and it has a

12:54

very sort of it’s kind of hard to

12:56

swallow but in a way that has a very

12:58

strong effect and we have Alan the film

13:02

I’m sorry the screening ends with Alan

13:05

frames um short film which is about the

13:08

death of his father and he’s he’s a gay

13:11

man from the south from Georgia and you

13:15

know he goes back home when his father

13:17

dies and it’s about it’s not only about

13:20

a delusion with his father but also

13:21

about his relationship with the place he

13:24

grew up which he’s not exactly totally

13:27

comfortable with and the film was really

13:29

beautiful and you can sort of feel this

13:31

tension throughout the whole film

13:33

between him and his environment and its

13:36

really very there’s it’s very simple but

13:40

there’s something very there’s a lot of

13:41

things going on and it’s really powerful

13:44

and he is very important because Alan

13:45

frame was my most important art

13:48

influence and many of the people in the

13:50

screening he also is somebody who had a

13:53

huge influence on either we taught them

13:54

or he’s mentored them and he’s kind of a

13:57

center of the community of people that

13:58

are involved in the screening and so I

14:01

chose to uh we chose to end it with his

14:03

film we did everybody I think that I

14:08

think that’s think that’s everyone I

14:11

think that we are film is in it too we

14:16

are some strawberries and celery design

14:18

new film with our friend Evan who’s

14:21

bipolar manic-depressive and it’s about

14:23

a fantasy of his which and and it’s a

14:27

good example of the style that we’re

14:29

working in now which is a video art and

14:32

documentary and trying to make it so you

14:35

literally can kind of feel like you

14:37

don’t know which one it is at any given

14:38

moment it the information is all real

14:41

but the way is is put together feels

14:45

like very the structure normal not a

14:50

normal structure for a documentary video

14:55

it’s very there’s a lot there’s a lot of

14:57

moments that are very loose they’re not

14:59

formal there hit awkward awkward looks

15:03

awkward laughs and that you know but to

15:07

try to paint a picture of this guy for

15:10

who really is not just trying to make it

15:13

too formal we don’t win top form of

15:15

people and we don’t want to do anything

15:16

that’s too formal

15:19

just kind of provide a window not just

15:23

to him but actually to understanding his

15:25

condition I think something subjectively

15:28

people look at other people out of time

15:30

and they don’t actually try to

15:33

understand the way that their minds

15:35

operate and how they might actually be

15:38

alienated but to actually kind of give

15:40

them this you know videos and extra

15:43

interesting medium and that you can

15:44

really illustrate with great detail the

15:48

way a person’s mind works and because of

15:51

if you can mirror somehow the way that

15:54

it’s put together visually in the

15:55

editing of it you can actually give the

15:57

audience a really interesting or you

15:59

went to how that person is actually

16:01

thinking like not when they’re

16:03

performing but when they’re alone by

16:05

themselves in the times that were there

16:07

not being watched so it’s sewn that’s

16:12

kind of what we’re working yeah and even

16:13

to be a little further we realized at a

16:16

certain point in doing making these

16:18

types of videos that uh you know it

16:22

traditionally when you see videos about

16:24

people where it’s explaining somebody’s

16:26

life for their problems you know it’s

16:28

words you learn things from the words

16:30

but at one point I think maybe it may

16:32

have to do the fact that I come from a

16:34

background of photography for most of my

16:36

life I was a photographer making the

16:38

part you know our photographs they

16:39

realize that it can be sometimes

16:41

sometimes people’s body language the

16:44

when they they look away from you those

16:46

moments can be more informative or more

16:49

educational or show you more about that

16:52

person and then all the things they are

16:54

telling you with their mouths so we we

16:57

really try to look at people and even

16:59

the way we film things in trying to

17:02

maybe cap look at the moments when it’s

17:04

not the interview the things in between

17:06

were you seeing the person with a mask

17:09

off a little bit or not not so concerned

17:11

with to show the the body language the

17:16

energy the uncomfortableness that tells

17:20

what’s really happening

17:22

and so to be able to try to most take

17:25

like make something that would be like a

17:27

documentary but even at some point take

17:30

away the words altogether and that would

17:32

be only the those moments of awkwardness

17:35

Cylons looking away so that’s something

17:39

that we’re definitely that’s kind of

17:41

what we’re doing now and it’s as we move

17:43

forward we’re really looking at that

17:45

being the focus is those those kinds of

17:48

moments in showing things about people

17:51

in their conditions in their brains and

17:54

everything inside of them and I think

17:55

that’s something that this the whole

17:57

program does really well in that it

17:59

deals a lot with subtext and it deals a

18:02

lot not with the kind of the glamour

18:04

that’s attached with art and with people

18:07

portraying themselves but the actual the

18:10

thing that lies between those kind of

18:12

those moments that actually show like

18:15

what people are really made of what they

18:17

may not actually want people to see and

18:20

that’s kind of the stuff that gets us

18:23

excited I think yes and to bring it full

18:26

circle that our program here is called

18:28

reduce polish and really you know it’s

18:31

not that we don’t like people who make

18:33

you know glossy stylized pretty work but

18:38

we think that sometimes it can be used

18:41

as a distract to distract you from you

18:44

know I don’t know that that taking those

18:47

things away it can show you something a

18:49

lot more pure and a lot more kind of

18:51

that’s got a lot more potency to it and

18:54

so in the work we do the people we try

18:57

to curate and work collaboratively

18:59

collaboratively with they’re trying to

19:03

pull away that stuff on the outside that

19:06

sometimes it can be used to this not to

19:10

deceive but to I don’t know we’re

19:14

looking in the underneath the skin and

19:17

so we yes we do spalla Sh that’s our

19:23

concept for a lot of things but for this

19:25

screening was to achieve that through

19:27

the selection of work that we put

19:29

together we’ve been doing that for a

19:32

couple years that’s actually how i met

19:34

and it’s an interesting project i

19:38

mean in the end I think of it it’s a

19:40

really good exercise you know what

19:42

happens is you there’s a string of

19:44

videos and there’s a lot of different

19:45

artists mostly mostly who are networking

19:47

through the internet and make a video

19:50

they give you the last 10 seconds of

19:51

their video and you make a one minute or

19:54

two minute video from that one piece and

19:56

one artist transitions to the next to

19:59

the next to the next it’s been good and

20:03

it’s made us it’s it’s challenged us to

20:07

try some different things to do some

20:09

very simple things and even in a way to

20:12

be sort of a little bit confrontational

20:14

be honest with you sometimes you’ll

20:17

receive a video from the artist that you

20:19

are going to work transition out of and

20:22

you’ll think you know my style is so

20:26

different than the style that you want

20:28

to create attention and that can be a

20:30

very good thing it can be good to to

20:33

feel like you want to push back not not

20:36

just to make a contrast with the style I

20:39

mean but just to create like a tension

20:42

that is good and I think the project is

20:45

successful as long if people are

20:46

actually thinking about what’s happening

20:48

and not just you know making a video and

20:51

sending out as long as they’re

20:53

challenging themselves and trying to

20:56

interact with the other people i think

20:58

it is successful sometimes it’s

20:59

successful sometimes it’s not but i

21:01

think it’s good in that it’s an exercise

21:04

where these artists are interacting and

21:07

I think it’s always good for people to

21:08

interacting and it’s always a learning

21:10

experience and I think that we’ve we’ve

21:14

had a really through our part through

21:17

our experiences being a part of it we’ve

21:20

learned a lot and that’s that’s a really

21:24

good thing for we’re glad that we’ve

21:26

been involved in it northern um I think

21:33

you covered everything I mean I think

21:35

again one of the most interesting

21:37

aspects of the exercises the social

21:41

aspect of it it’s just the communication

21:42

with other people you know all over the

21:46

world and and the friction that

21:49

sometimes ensues when people don’t get

21:51

along and it’s that’s actually some of

21:54

the most interesting stuff that happens

21:56

yeah there’s a hole on the internet as

22:00

we arrange the trendy the migration of

22:05

these videos of the people you know

22:06

people making them sending to the next

22:09

person there’s dialogue and there’s a

22:11

lot of people involved in a lot of the

22:14

people there’s a lot of different

22:15

personalities and some of those

22:17

personalities are not good together and

22:19

it’s very interesting and it and there’s

22:21

within the all this communication

22:23

there’s been a lot of interesting things

22:24

that have happened good and bad but it’s

22:27

there’s been a there’s been an evolution

22:32

you know of through for this food is

22:36

intense communication has happened of

22:38

all these different people with

22:39

different personalities having to learn

22:41

to work together and it’s been you know

22:42

it’s been high points and low points and

22:45

very some some drama to let’s all led to

22:49

you know a growth I think that’s good

22:54

the different a bowling bowling one and

22:57

two Molly knows

22:59

their game of the video by the the

23:02

second hot topics what do you think

23:06

that’s right yeah the first one I think

23:08

was just a general kind of pass on your

23:11

video and then make something that

23:13

response whereas the second there were

23:15

like a food however many themes where I

23:21

couldn’t really work out what they are

23:23

exactly but they’re these different

23:25

themes and then yours basically in terms

23:27

of whatever you want whether it be style

23:30

or the subject matter content whatever

23:32

you can actually try to incorporate that

23:35

theme in whatever it is that you’re

23:37

doing and so that that’s one thing

23:41

that’s been different I think instead of

23:42

one minute which was the first round was

23:44

a one-minute video the second round is a

23:46

has been one to two minutes that you can

23:49

you can have a two-minute video and

23:51

that’s good there’s been a lot more

23:53

artists involved on the second round I

23:56

think just it’s it’s it’s kind of

23:58

expanded oh yeah there’s been new

24:00

artists and I think that the one thing

24:03

that I think we this that we see in

24:06

comparing them are one to the second one

24:10

is that the good thing about the first

24:13

one is that it was this a small group of

24:15

people who as they did these they learn

24:19

how to do a good job the no one has got

24:21

some experience people with the project

24:24

and some people who are unexperienced

24:25

and so you see some variation and i

24:28

think that the project it gets better

24:31

when everybody gets like on the same

24:33

page when everybody understands how to

24:35

do it and make it make it good and make

24:37

the things flow and have them be tight

24:41

not not all over the place and so I

24:44

think you’ll see again as some of the

24:47

new people start to learn what will make

24:50

a success versus what might feel a

24:52

little not so strong they’ll get better

24:55

and better and that’s what’s interesting

24:56

is that the people who are involved who

24:58

actually are talking about the videos

25:01

and talking to each other on the

25:02

internet and so that makes it stronger

25:04

that makes it

25:05

go and get tighter and that’s I think

25:08

that’s where the success lies is like is

25:09

that people are really thinking about

25:14

how to do how to do it well and you know

25:17

the great the Great needs there’s been

25:19

people have been doing it for a couple

25:20

of years and apart our selves included

25:24

and I think those people have learned

25:26

learn how to how to make these things

25:28

successful and so you like like anything

25:31

if you have a team and you have some new

25:34

people they have to learn how to play on

25:36

the team and and then things evolve and

25:40

I think that with new ones there’s new

25:43

artists with a lot of possibility for

25:44

success and they’re going to have to

25:46

grow together

25:57

you

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