Artists in Conversation: Curtis Talwst Santiago and Manuel Mathieu

2022

Watch our May 28 conversation with Curtis Talwst Santiago and Manuel Mathieu. ‘Manuel Mathieu: World Discovered Under Other Skies’ is organized and circulated by The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery, Toronto, in collaboration with the Art Gallery of Alberta, and is curated by Amin Alsaden. Both exhibitions are on now at the AGA!Watch our May 28 conversation with Curtis Talwst Santiago and Manuel Mathieu. ‘Manuel Mathieu: World Discovered Under Other Skies’ is organized and circulated by The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery, Toronto, in collaboration with the Art Gallery of Alberta, and is curated by Amin Alsaden. Both exhibitions are on now at the AGA! …

Autogenerated Transcript from YouTube (if available)

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0:07

if you could just chat a little bit about you know what it is to be showing in edmonton um you know maybe

0:13

particularly for you curtis as you are are born here um raised here grew up

0:18

here but it’s been quite a while since since you’ve actually been in the city and so maybe um you could each sort of

0:25

say a little bit about you know what it is to be showing your work uh here in edmonton in this particular context

0:34

good afternoon everyone i’m curtis hallways santiago the tall waste is a

0:40

ancestral nickname that comes from trinidad because my father and all the santiago

0:45

men would be easily identified in their village because our wastes

0:51

are simply very high and so i’m a tolerance and so i’m recognized as a santiago

0:59

um reason why for me for it is important now specifically now

1:06

uh it’s because this exhibition when i kept thinking why am i interested in

1:11

carnaval from a time period that wasn’t mine and it’s my parents

1:18

for when they were young and first being able to step out into their own and play

1:24

carnival and wear these costumes it’s because i’m from a generation that came to

1:30

canada uh in the 60s late 60s when almost similar to the windrush movement

1:36

in the uk where the commonwealth that had opened up its doors canada or

1:42

the caribbean and so a lot of uh my friends parents who are all around the same age

1:48

are starting to suffer from dementia uh have passed away uh uh the memories are

1:56

shifting and fading and in my text up there it says this this exhibition is

2:02

specifically for my mother and father uh and so not too far from here churchill

2:08

square where the early kerry west festivals would happen is where i began to

2:14

understand my like my culture’s stories and then later in life travel to africa

2:20

and parts of the world and see rituals and festivals that felt very similar

2:27

were happening in in the caribbean in carnival and so uh while my parents are

2:32

here with me on this earth i want them to be celebrated in these spaces i had the opportunity to take

2:40

them to a very kim hamburger banhof in germany where i’m living and prior to entering i’m

2:47

like oh my god they’re going to my dad is going to be so bored this is going to be and

2:53

i was so wrong i had underestimated their visual language and their ability

2:59

to connect to we’re talking about a crack on the ground that runs the length of

3:06

the museum and then there’s a red dot on the wall something like so conceptual and my dad to engage and my mom to

3:12

engage and then i realized i had been excluding them like that teenager who’s embarrassed of his parents from my world

3:19

in a certain way and it was time to really celebrate them and welcome them and so uh uh sorry i’m taking a bit of

3:26

time here bro um last night i had

3:32

friends from kindergarten their moms come and these were the moms that when they

3:37

had to babysit us all as a group would bring us to spaces like this and have us run around and so for them

3:44

to see this little kid who was always coloring with them now on the walls here

3:49

was makes it extra special and it’s a show of celebration and very nostalgic

3:55

and sentimental um

4:00

i’ll take the ball from there well my uh we had a little conversation before that

4:07

where he was telling me all of that and what stayed with me is

4:12

actually what makes it special for me to show here right now it’s actually to be

4:18

able to be next to him you know which is kind of a beautiful

4:23

coincidence because the first time we met we talked about doing something together

4:28

uh but when i understood that he was from here and that he actually experienced

4:34

his caribbean roots in this area you know and now he’s bringing a show

4:40

that is actually talking about relate to what’s happening in the show because we share somehow the same legacy when it

4:47

comes to these events you know i’ve seen these uh job that you know the jab jabs

4:53

many many times in in haiti um so for me this

4:59

it’s kind of like i’m part of

5:04

curtis imagination by extension you know so it kind of creates a different

5:11

perspective uh about the certain things that we’re looking at together

5:17

you know uh so to be together actually we’re nourishing each other

5:22

you know because i don’t want to just see the show as something that is not in relation to

5:28

what’s happening around it you know what i mean so you know if um

5:34

if my show is called it’s called like a world discovered under other skies i would like to believe that what’s

5:40

happening it’s actually what’s up it’s it’s what’s happening on the earth

5:46

and you know this is the sky and then this is it’s completing what is happening

5:52

under that sky basically so yeah i mean that’s for me that’s what

5:57

stays the most because the show i’ve seen it and i can talk about how it was conceptualized later on uh during this

6:04

conversation but i think it’s this kind of invisible collaboration that for me is gonna stay

6:12

in my mind you know um we we talked about

6:18

uh before we talked about what are the works in each other’s shows that

6:25

we consider it important and what are the connections that you see between these works what are the you

6:31

know is there something that resonates with you on my side

6:38

that you believe he’s in conversation with here and i’ll do the same actually because i

6:44

can see a lot of elements well i think first the

6:50

technical the alchemy of the material of paint how it can be

6:56

watered down or it can be thinned out how it can be applied in a very thick gesture over the lean

7:03

those sort of things i see which are obvious but then the other side of it is um

7:11

the my mom in her previous life

7:17

before accepting spirituality in new forms i would say that the spirit realm

7:23

of the works where things feel ancient but contemporary at

7:29

the same time that’s what i i find the connection um

7:34

there’s this yin and yang where you can stare at a painting that’s so

7:40

beautiful visually beautiful but then the underside of it is quite dark

7:45

and it’s the same here where there’s this is meant to be joyful but within joy there is a range of emotions that

7:52

can you can be scared and still experience joy like when you’re running from the jab jab in the street or the

7:58

conquer on in senegal you know there’s a smile on your face but especially in senegal if you’re caught by the

8:04

conqueror you’re going to be beat by this group of newly initiated men like it’s quite dangerous and so those are

8:12

constantly at play you know and where i feel like with your show it meets me

8:18

your work it meets me where i’m at and when i’m willing to be like okay you

8:24

want to look into the dark side today and you can see those the the things of humanity that

8:30

aren’t always sweet and pleasant but or if i’m like not wanting to accept that

8:36

enjoy the work yeah so there’s like a there’s a sense of openness i mean that’s also what i’m

8:41

seeing in this in the show also is that um i don’t feel like the work is trying to

8:48

convince me of something it’s a work that is open it’s a work that is actually um

8:54

it’s not seducing me but is he’s accepting to be interpreted in many

9:00

different ways you know i think it’s um and that perspective uh

9:06

feeds the complexities of our legacies you know what i mean and not just as

9:12

with the carnival or with dictatorships and things like that or his historical moments but also as black men black

9:19

people you know and you talked about spirituality which i think is very important because

9:26

to to address that to accept that we’re spiritual beings i

9:31

think it’s all it’s also accepting that we you know that’s part of our human it’s

9:36

accepting our humanity but the same with the same breath [Music]

9:42

it’s needed i think it’s needed because um

9:48

it’s heavy sometimes to be perceived as a monolith yeah um

9:55

and i think this this perspective reduces the possibilities for us to be different things in the

10:01

world you know and to be fragile also to be vulnerable and to be you know all these things

10:08

uh you have a you have a little yeah yes

10:14

i have a one in he’s uh one year and six months felix how how

10:21

you talked about your parents you know and how they live things that was transferred to

10:27

you what do you think you will transfer to your kid to your

10:33

boy i hope uh as

10:39

for a long period of time um family lineage was very short like uh my parents it wasn’t

10:47

as important to them as it is to the next generation i think especially because when you said growing up in in

10:54

port-au-prince when you were given the catalogue of agnes martin and all these people you

11:00

could easily insert yourself in this world because being a person of color wasn’t because

11:06

you’re surrounded by people of color and you’re like oh this is a thing that exists in the world and i can exist in the world like we’re like all these

11:11

other artists for children of the diaspora where maybe you’re not constantly surrounded by

11:17

people that look like you there’s this search for like where do i come from what are what what are my

11:22

roots and as over time through travel and and recently in tennessee a place i

11:30

would never think that i would find more information about myself my uncle calls

11:35

me and says we have a cousin who is uh was a chemistry professor

11:40

in just outside of knoxville you should contact him because he has the a lot of the family history and so one of the

11:46

first things he tells me is that oh yeah your great grandfather was a scottish

11:51

farmer who came to the island of saint vincent and died in the volcano when the

11:57

volcano erupted he refused to leave and he was outside always doing his thing and breathing in

12:02

everything it’s what and from that his daughter my my um

12:08

then left and came to trinidad started a whole other uh on my father’s side his

12:15

grandfather is a white frenchman so what i want to pass on to felix is that

12:21

we’re made up of so many people and that the world is a space where you’re not

12:27

just going to be viewed as a mixed race child and your the complexities are beyond

12:33

labeling and that because of that the world is yours as well and you belong in all the

12:38

spaces that you can enter because that was felt that i could go to certain spaces

12:44

because people would alienate you alienate you or make you feel or make a comment that you shouldn’t be there

12:51

and that’s what i what i hope to pass on to him that through these stories and the more stories that i begin to tell

12:57

and that there’s that there’s there’s yeah that that information is there for him to uncover

13:05

yeah something you said also that i really liked

13:10

uh i asked him what what what what did he wanted his his kid to be you know he

13:16

said i want him to be happy i want him to be kind and i want him to be proud proud proud confident and comfortable

13:23

you know and i think that’s that’s kind of that’s they really got to me because i don’t want kids yet right

13:29

but uh a lot of my friends are having kids and yeah i can see them change you

13:35

know their their beliefs and they’ve kind of built a different sense of preservation of themselves suddenly

13:41

because you know they’re kind of faced with yeah they want to also secure that human being the more they can and

13:47

give as much as they can talking about giving i want us to talk about two things

13:55

generosity and time do you think it’s important to be generous as an

14:00

artist and what does that mean to you and i’ll answer the same thing later it comes for me it comes down to my

14:07

mentor an indigenous artist in vancouver lawrence paul

14:20

and i knocked on his door one day after walking past and seeing his work

14:26

and i was wanting to become an artist and i knocked on his door and i asked if he would show me how to paint and all

14:32

these things because i had seen his work in a gallery and started dreaming about his work and then one day i’m going

14:38

along my route in vancouver and i’m like man this guy’s got a lot of lawrence paul’s and i look further into the condo

14:44

and it’s lawrence there painting and he took me in and he just would always say the one day

14:50

some some scruffy-looking kid is going to come knock on your door and you’re going to have to pay it forward also

14:58

another thing um was like you’re gonna cross the finish line your job is to stand at that finish line and

15:05

make sure that everyone who resonates or connects you looks like you whatever but

15:10

feels drawn to you you to wait and make sure that they cross that line as well and i just think you know

15:16

uh yeah oh they want you to move your mic up yeah

15:22

i just think that uh the way towards abundance is to be generous and the more

15:29

you give of yourself and your energies and your time i’ve found that it’s been reciprocal when people are just more

15:35

than willing to give me a moment of their time or push my career forward and all these

15:41

things yeah what about you uh

15:47

there’s two layers there’s the there’s the generosity of

15:53

sharing the work or actually the relationship that i have with the work and

15:58

the generosity as a human being you know because um

16:04

they’re very very close they’re different um

16:09

and i think the the there’s something about

16:14

making art and the mastery of making art for me that

16:21

relates to the capacity to to pass it on you know to pass it on your understanding and to

16:27

understand and to really get that um

16:34

that knowledge that you have is only valuable when it’s transferred you know

16:40

same the knowledge in terms of how you do it what matters for you in the work but also

16:46

the work itself you know it’s important to give access to the work to your

16:52

the best way you can you know because you know i was telling you before

16:58

i think we will be judge the finish line by why we gave not what we’re taking

17:06

away with us you know so that’s my mentality in terms of in terms of

17:12

who i’m becoming as a as a human being and that also connects to the generosity of mentoring people

17:18

you know because like you said when we were in certain places growing up they weren’t people like us

17:25

and because of the privilege i have now it’s important for me to be the person that i

17:31

would have liked to met you know because i made a lot of mistakes which is good

17:38

let me take your skin yeah but if i can tell someone that looks like me in any

17:44

format way that you know there’s a few holes here and there and you know just so they can uh

17:50

get further yeah you know and protect their sensitive hearts because often yeah

17:56

yeah to be you don’t even have to be very sensitive

18:01

we’ll get it yeah it’ll get you i feel like we you know

18:06

you know we talked about that briefly that

18:11

to be to be an artist you need to have a sense of confidence in yourself because

18:17

regardless of our aspirations artists or not

18:22

i really believe that this world is working really really hard to take our confidence and dignity away from us

18:29

make us doubt ourselves and not reach our full potential and when we talked about it

18:36

we both had a strong confidence not that

18:52

of not even having a body of work maybe you’ve just painted

18:59

a terrible portrait at like 14 15 but then to come to a museum and

19:04

be like yeah yeah i can see myself here like and just

19:12

you know it’s like well you’re a long way from that but that that feeling of uh of like

19:20

we’re saying with basquiat that radiant child where everyone i think who starts on the journey not everyone but most

19:25

people i feel starts on the journey feel that there’s just something a little bit special about what they’re doing that

19:31

will warrant being on this wall even though you know they may not be there yeah that’s that’s

19:36

uh i totally agree and i think it’s uh to believe that i think it’s important for everybody to

19:42

believe that they’re special because we are you know i’m not trying i’m not saying that to

19:48

seduce you or anything but i i really believe that you know when you’re entering the world and you

19:54

manage to preserve that sense of uniqueness inside of you

19:59

you tend to do unique things you know and that’s i think it’s important for

20:07

for all of us to grow in a in a healthy way you know and what about time what’s up with uh

20:15

time time well that painting taught me a bit about

20:21

time in the sense of um it was the last one i did while i was on residency and i think it’s probably one

20:28

of the strongest because it had the least amount of time and it had gave me the least amount of time to overthink yeah and uh there was

20:36

an urgency there that then has sparked a new confidence in me that will

20:42

go on to the next painting and it doesn’t mean that the next painting i do is going to take oh just be like

20:48

because it’s never that way you go i got this this should be a few hours or a few days and then you

20:55

get beat up by the the work and you’re like oh but uh it is it is it has taught me a lot

21:02

about just that it’s possible when i am very focused

21:08

that the amount of time that i’m given i can make something that feels good to

21:14

me and it’s not that i need months no i need months to do it and because with

21:20

the birth of felix i’ve had to repri i had to prioritize i had no boundaries and we talked about

21:26

this that thing we’re saying we talked about this yesterday anyways i had no boundaries with art it would be

21:33

well it’s your mom’s retirement party and i’m like oh but i got this painting

21:38

on the wall or it was like nothing would come before the idea and now that’s just not the case like it’s just

21:45

not there’s this little life that any moment i spend with him it not only feeds me but i’m watching him

21:52

and it’s like yeah i don’t need 12 hours in the studio of just lounging and exploring my mind i can

22:00

prioritize other things and so yeah that’s but then there’s also

22:05

um time with the time in the sense of i love things that look

22:13

this drawing originally this canvas originally started in 2017 it was rolled

22:18

it’s been folded it’s been so by the time i started painting on it there were creases there were marks that that had

22:25

happened that really then dictated the direction of it and i feel like it completely enhanced the and it loosened

22:32

me up so the patina of of the sun dry out you know fading pigment i’m upset

22:39

i’m seduced by what actual time and conditions can do

22:44

to a work and that it’s not like when um last thing i’ll say is i remember

22:49

looking at manaes in books and it’s so glossy it’s so it looks like

22:55

a jolly rancher candy it’s just and then you see it in person and it’s hair and

23:01

it’s cracked and it’s just oh and you’re like oh that’s that’s even better

23:06

that’s even better so i i still i when i look at these works i’m like they’re too new to really

23:14

do what they’re going to need to do they like they need to that charcoal needs to possibly have

23:20

gotten rubbed off when it’s re-rolled and sent somewhere it needs that weathering like the memory that my

23:26

parents of are telling me like in the audio my mom my father and i sitting with my

23:33

son sitting around the kitchen table my mom and i are cooking a traditional dish and my parents are trying to recall a

23:39

specific carnival a fight happened and it’s like seinfeld they’re talking over each other

23:46

they’re talking over each other and they’re like and then all sudden their memories sync up and the lyrics are slightly different

23:53

the melody is different from each one but it’s we know what’s happening there and that is what i hope the works in time

24:00

begin to feel like i i had a an answer but i got

24:06

carried i’m in the carnival right

24:12

after the the rum punches yeah it’s kicking uh i’m gonna uh build on what you said

24:20

in terms of the uh the patina because i’ve made paintings that are actually titled patina

24:25

because at some point i really wanted to have the feeling that i’m not creating the work but i’m finding it like the

24:32

word is already on the canvas and i’m just scratching i’m scratching and while i’m scratching and rubbing and all of

24:39

that what is actually supposed to be there is it’s taking more and more uh he’s getting more and more momentum

24:45

and then this this thing starts appearing because i’m very much interested in more modes of apparition

24:51

you know how the how do you go from uh from an idea to something that feels like something and then how do you

24:59

decide to keep certain areas of that thing and and take it to maturity to a certain point

25:05

uh but i think it’s uh the idea of

25:11

not creating something but finding it take away

25:16

that sense of authorship like this is my work this is this idea i

25:21

think is it’s kind of obsolete if we agree that we’re just passing on

25:29

we’re translating reality in a way that is very close to all of us you know

25:35

uh so it’s not really us you know what is i was telling what what is really known

25:42

is the capacity to jungle to jungle to juggle juggles right yeah thank god to

25:48

juggle with the transformation you know and the works become the residue of uh you

25:57

know juggling you know what i mean um and i think

26:04

that perspective for me takes away a lot of pressure because i don’t feel like um

26:10

because this object has its own intelligence i don’t have this kind of sense that this is mine

26:16

or i have a responsibility towards it

26:22

you know i mean even though i do can i i have two

26:27

the first question is um do you ever sketch a composition and then work

26:34

it happens sometimes sometimes um the sketching of the composition is very

26:40

much like framing a picture because

26:46

their own lines floating and once they hit the canvas suddenly there’s there’s limits there’s a moment

26:52

the line stops existing because it’s outside of the frame but then you know in photography you

26:58

learn that you can you can point into things that are outside of the frame and vice versa

27:05

so i sometimes i do organize just to kind of sit the figure or the place to say

27:11

this is where it’s going to be briefly but since they’re very very basic lines yeah just so i know

27:18

that this figure is not in the center of the painting for example you know when you say the when you talk about the

27:25

discovering my i feel like my painting practice is very much one of discovery

27:31

and you can tell when it feels confident where like i’m going like this yeah

27:36

whatever’s under here i’m going for it or it’s like what’s the difference what’s the

27:41

difference what visually how do you how would you like describe that or like you know say that

27:51

that one was like jesus i’m still composing with it you know this is like

27:58

this yeah that is just

28:03

and what’s the difference for you like currently by how do you internally um

28:09

even my physicality of while i’m drawing if i’m open and i’m like with that

28:19

this it was like

28:25

a step back and yeah not just attacking it and

28:31

that’s why this feels still unresolved to me it feels still open like it’s

28:37

waiting for that moment when i lose all preciousness of the fact that it’s

28:42

since 2017 and i just surrender to whatever you’re going to be

28:48

you’re going to be and i will put you away after that it’s not there yet there’s nothing more

28:54

i would want to add to that canvas there’s nothing i could there’s not even looking at it now

29:00

i don’t see one thing i could do differently here i’m still like

29:05

what the what leads me to think that what i would love to do and experiment with you in the future

29:11

is to you know when they first start excavating and they put the pins around and they and the soil isn’t i would like

29:18

for us to send each other our initial excavations the first line the first

29:24

and then allow each other just to then uncover and discover from that point

29:30

even if it’s not lines it’s paint whatever that removal that scratching of the surface i would like to know what

29:36

happens when i scratch at your surface what appears to me and vice versa

29:44

i would i would like to because i uh i just feel like i’ve always been waiting

29:49

for my contemporary like frank bowling had hockney and him and rb

29:57

katai and all these guys who went to slay they had each other uh and i feel like now at this stage where

30:03

i’m getting more confident where i can look at my friends who are doing amazing work and feel no jealousy and feel no

30:09

like oh i’m not good enough like what is going on i can look at their work and feel be curious and feel proud that i’m

30:16

even in connection and dialogue with these people and i feel like over the last few years you and i the

30:23

conversations we had the work is so different but it’s like i just yeah like i i feel very honored

30:31

that i go through this this game this this this time period

30:36

with looking at what you’re doing and how you navigate the art world we’re in a time right now where a lot of

30:44

i’m just going to be candid a lot of young black artists are

30:49

really coveted by the market in the early 2000s there was chinese painters and artists that were like

30:55

super hot you have to get them blah blah and some really continued on and a lot lost the the value

31:01

but it’s like it’s it’s it’s it’s it feels very vicious and then there’s a time not too long ago which is still

31:08

going on well female figurative painters or painters who are doing queer scenes it’s just like

31:13

oh we wanna we why do we want it you know and uh i i i just um

31:18

yeah the way you navigate it all with it not being solely about

31:24

the color of your skin or the way you dr it’s about this rigor and this intensity and and and

31:32

dedication to the craft and i yeah i admire that so much

31:37

i admire your uh your gift too thanks miller the

31:42

something you said about that painting about digging um [Music]

31:47

i i’m curious to know is it the the fact that you don’t know where

31:53

you’re going right within the painting uh is this something that and you’re do you deal with that in your life i

32:00

don’t know where i’m going yeah but you know yeah you have a sense of where you’re going and and how do you bring that those kind of certainties that

32:06

you’ve built over the years in the work and and how do you compose with uh with

32:12

not knowing because uh i feel very grateful to be able to do do art because the the

32:19

the fact that i’ve spent so many times trying to make a good painting

32:24

um it creates a kind of it forces me to build patience to build

32:31

a kind of like relationship to time a relationship to mistakes yeah relationship with

32:38

um with several elements that of my character

32:43

you know and i’m curious to know how does your work informed your your growth

32:49

as as a you as a man this blank list

32:55

is the idea that the manifestations the list of the your bucket list of things you want are on the other side

33:03

it’s only for him to see he’s the trickster so his tongue is kind of like like he’s showing

33:09

you the paper but you’re like there’s nothing there but on the other side the list of and i’m always thinking about

33:16

i’ve always had faith i remember when i distinctly told my mom

33:22

in the catholic church one day i’m like i don’t believe what this guy is saying i don’t want to come anymore

33:28

and she didn’t make me go to church anymore so when people ask are you religious i’m like i’m not religious in

33:34

the sense that i believe in one denomination the greatest thing though i did get from my mom teaching me about

33:39

religion with faith in in my most destitute lowest times where

33:45

it’s like okay is it going to be this cadmium red oil stick that’s 28

33:51

or is it gonna be groceries for the week and i choose the cadmium red oil stick

33:57

there’s faith in that whatever that investment is that it’s gonna pan out it’s got it’s got to pan out and even

34:04

like that has never never waned and so

34:10

that is the underlying current of i’ve always then my mom would say be careful what you

34:15

asked for you’re a manifesto i would watch you as a little kid dream about blah blah blah blah and

34:22

you’d make up the story and then this thing kind of comes true so i would always be like

34:27

like the ones i liked was with van gogh and and frank bowling and be like i hope

34:34

that my career isn’t like warhol isn’t like uh you know like where you

34:39

just take off and you’re super huge and that’s i wanted it to be steady and recognize that i hope there’s a moment

34:45

when people are looking at my stuff being like this is horrible this isn’t it you don’t have it

34:52

because those are the the artists that i would always read about like years and years later because maybe it

34:59

wasn’t their time and when i first started doing the dioramas oh i got laughed at

35:05

laughed at galleries being oh that’s cute we don’t look at art like this

35:11

[Music] so yeah i i’m within the uncovering

35:18

i know that one day this will resolve itself and that feeling will be like when you finish the hardest level in

35:24

mario or some video game like but i’m i have faith that it will get

35:30

there and patience that’ll get there because i’m in this forever i’ve worked an office job that’s on you it couldn’t it couldn’t go

35:37

for me i couldn’t the security that other friends had didn’t feel like security to me yeah

35:43

yeah that’s beautiful man that’s really nice

35:50

uh i have a question for you actually in relation to the infinite series um

35:58

i’m interested to know because i know what you said it’s the series that this it’s not it’s not stopped it’s something

36:03

that you continuously as long as my hands i have your hands i have the dexterity to do it yeah

36:10

at what moment that you understood that it’s something that you’re gonna be doing forever because i have a relationship like that with a project

36:16

which is a drawing book that um i produced five years ago and i said to

36:22

myself every five to six years i will produce another drawing book that will summarize a selection of drawings

36:29

and the the idea is to have a kind of lineal kind of growth and understanding of my

36:35

perspective as somebody who’s drawing and i’m just committed to it so next year i technically we have to work on

36:41

this second book but uh actually i don’t i’m answering i’m

36:47

asking you a question but i’m asked and i’m wondering like i’m asking myself the same question i don’t even know the

36:52

answer yet but i’m curious to know when did you know in that in the making of these this series that it’s something

36:58

that you will be doing for the rest of your life okay at what moment there’s like i think there’s

37:05

there’s two or there’s like no let’s say there’s two um

37:10

when i so i make these tiny tiny sculptures and jewelry boxes

37:15

that we we during the pandemic like during the opening closing periods of the

37:20

pandemic we were showing here and they’re just tableaus of scenes from

37:26

either art history or personal life the ones i chose to show here were image or little tiny scenes

37:32

using like train scale uh ma of my parents basement in the 1970s and

37:39

the series was called soca in the suburbs and so it was the 70s shag carpet that orange bar the orange rotary

37:46

phone the avocado green all of those those feel the shag carpet uh

37:52

um so with that series when i made the first one i had asked the universe after seeing on

38:00

my first trip to the met a portrait by van gaal of of just just a self-portrait and the

38:07

line of people to see this portrait from all walks of life we’re talking like the construction guy with his kids it’s

38:14

summertime he’s got to do something to like you know the the european art people who are you know with their

38:20

perfectly round glasses and you can tell by the aesthetic that he’s probably an architect or something like

38:25

these it was like these these stereotypes were all there but they all were there to see this piece of art and

38:31

i was like i hope i make something one day that is almost like pop music in a sense that no matter who i show it to it

38:37

resonates and when i made the first diorama i would be catching a bus early in the morning and there was this

38:43

chinese older chinese woman who would we would sit in silence because our worlds felt like they couldn’t be further apart

38:48

and one day i had the courage to go like this to her and she opened it and that bridged the gap and every morning

38:55

after that did you have another one and we would talk and there was this and i was like okay this is the thing

39:01

because my music would be very specific you have to like rap or this or you have to like everything else was very if my

39:07

paintings had to be very like you have a specific taste if you like the type of work that i’m doing the dioramas across

39:14

the board and that’s when it was like this is that’s why i called the infinite infinity series because i also had an

39:21

art critic early in my life say well how long can this be a thing and i’m

39:26

like you would never turn to a painter and be like well how long can you paint on canvas for like i felt it was just so so crazy you

39:34

know and so that yeah you know those two moments after that

39:39

them telling me that i’m like well i’m never stopping this change your life yeah yeah that’s beautiful

39:48

i never thought i saw that coming it’s interesting that you see that those objects

39:54

they touch people regardless where they the realm of life

40:00

regardless of the subject matter it could be highly political it could be and when you say touch what

40:05

draws me to them is that often these ring boxes some of them i’ve had are 100 years old

40:11

some are 25 years old some are fi they’ve been held by i get them mainly from vintage stores ebay

40:17

they’ve been held and sat in a drawer and and you

40:22

know little i remember always opening up my mom’s engagement box to the point that it was like worn down and like it

40:29

it has this history of frequency running through it a patina you know and

40:35

of life yeah the idea of not knowing what’s i think it’s playing with something that

40:41

like you know it’s playing with that with the moment of i can’t stop thinking about this kid

40:46

that you have this gift and you’re just like there it is and then you’re like oh that you know the kid is is excited and

40:53

i think it’s a part of us that never changes that playful yeah that playfulness that there’s something in

40:59

this to discover there’s something in this that that you know and it’s so little that it’s

41:05

personal you know this discovery is for me you know and i think strangely enough

41:12

good paintings big or small they have the capacity to kind of draw you in

41:18

and it starts i just i like to say a good painting it takes your eyes then it takes your body then it takes your soul

41:25

you know and if you’re ready to if you’re ready to let go to it it will grab you you

41:32

know deeper and deeper and deeper and that’s the same experience when you know with with this it’s intimate

41:37

and you can see oh so much you know let me ask you something as you say

41:43

vigilant you make these gestures your ceramics your works

41:49

can feel very have very serious and not to say that ceramics aren’t serious but

41:55

there is it feels for me more of a playful element do you feel that when you were

42:00

and what do you attribute that playful feeling yeah well the the

42:06

it’s funny you’re talking we talked about discovery and opening the box because there’s an immediacy

42:12

in tracing those lines um even though it’s a long process in

42:18

terms of the cooking the yeah all the after the after care but but the the the shaping of the lines and there’s two

42:24

artists that influenced me and this is george lyoto that you probably know or you should look up he’s a haitian

42:31

metal cutter okay and uh build trailer yes you know the way that i eat i see it

42:37

now the lines i see it down yeah creates strong metaphors you know in very simple ways i used to say that

42:44

uh the best artists are the ones that mastered the shortcuts in their work

42:51

because we’re all trying to do a good painting that’s hard you never step up there

42:56

yeah you all of us religiously trying to do a

43:01

good painting you know and it’s sometimes it’s it’s a good day sometimes it’s a bad day but we’re all

43:07

aiming the same energy and what happened is

43:12

as you make more and more and more paintings you’re trying to look for shorter ways

43:18

to get to where you need to go less illustrated for me yeah yeah you see that

43:23

every we all trying to find the shortest way to get to where we want to go not that we want to get there faster yeah we

43:30

just want to see it because we’re the first to explore we’re the first to see our work

43:36

so we’re the first to have a heart on yeah and we’re the first to know my god this is yeah

43:41

i i’m enjoying this right so it’s kind of a selfish context but

43:46

when when uh the the the ceramics for me

43:53

when i’m doing it uh the cutting and all of that things happen very fast you know there’s

44:00

moments you’re like because if you cut it in the wrong way you just you just move it yeah right so

44:06

that’s why that’s where the playfulness comes into play because you’re in direct relationship with uh with the material

44:12

we talked a lot about the joys of and the importance of naivete

44:18

because it allows you to step into spaces maybe you shouldn’t have but you’re there now um

44:23

your entry into ceramics was there training or was it like uh

44:29

like primarily self-taught in that medium it’s self-taught and what got me to that

44:35

is the the alchemy you know the ultimate idea that you can take the four elements

44:42

and create an object that has a spiritual value for me that was because maybe that’s

44:48

what i was trying to do in painting you know but to literally use air like

44:54

soil a fire and water water and then put it together in

45:00

a way that just generates something that touches first me and then other people

45:06

i was like i need to i need to kind of dive into this and thankfully the

45:12

curator uh pushed me to do some more because i did the first one in china and

45:18

then when i came back it was like we would like a few of them but then it exploded and now i’m full on doing sculptures

45:25

literally 3d and if you told me i would be doing this i would have been laughing yeah you know

45:30

but to get it comes from the the playing with your hands and and then just like beating the

45:37

the the soil literally the clay and then end up with something like okay

45:42

my dog yeah and because i’m a pain i i use the paint a lot of colors

45:48

i can see how i’m going to blaze it you know yeah it’s kind of like i’m already three step if it doesn’t pop and

45:55

uh in the kiln because the surroundings that’s where i learned to do this

46:00

a lot you know you just surrendered to like it goes like this when i started my my

46:06

mentor at the time who’s my assistant now told me you need to learn to let go

46:11

from the get-go because this thing you you you might get to the finish line and

46:19

lucky you if you don’t you might miss a few feathers or you might not get there at all you

46:24

know yeah and i’ve went through all of the phases of putting a piece that cracks putting another one that blew up

46:30

putting another one that got to the finish line and and and so

46:35

it’s it’s um it’s the alchemy of it and figure it out you know to

46:42

and bring it some into my painting you know

46:48

how do you feel about we take field some questions are there any questions

46:55

or comments we can go both ways or disagreements also yeah so

47:01

we’re not here with any kind of precious knowledge

47:08

okay okay so this acts as a personal map um of my journey and my family’s journey

47:15

as i know it so hidden in lines or for just something very clear

47:21

this is monrepo aka the scheme that’s the nickname for

47:26

the neighborhood that my mom and dad grew up in and met met in and so

47:32

here we have these christmas lights that hang from in my mom’s veranda they hang around this

47:39

column but they then turn into outline alberta specifically sherwood

47:45

park as it comes up through here and tucked in behind uh

47:50

through various points for or let’s say the reason why the great wall of china was here is because i was manifesting to

47:56

have my work be shown over there i’ve always wanted to see the great wall of china since very small and i’ve realized

48:03

that i could use my art and my ideas to make some of these things happen and so when this

48:09

painting leaves here in to shanghai and so

48:15

this was this drawing was placed on here in 2017 before i started to develop the contacts

48:20

um the the power of the number six is uh the of like more life uh the

48:28

continuation of life uh and also can be considered uh if you get double sixes

48:34

it’s lucky those sort of things and so the dominoes constantly in various ways add up to six six here six here we have

48:40

six here then we have six here again and then this is a six as well so

48:47

there’s just it’s like codes little secrets and codes of spaces the

48:53

rockies i lived in vancouver for a long period of time here’s a silhouette where

48:58

there’s some of the facial my mom and it’s meant to act as this kind of angel flying throughout over the

49:04

whole scene uh waterways from within trinidad uh different

49:10

lakes uh not lakes sorry little rivers and streams that are important and places i’ve visited and it’s i

49:18

initially thought it was something that would be folded up and it’s unfolded and it acts like it sits in your pocket and

49:23

it’s always changing this is my mom’s yard where she finally built her dream

49:29

house in trinidad and she often sits in the veranda which is out of frame and when we first when i first started

49:35

conceiving this work her and i were sitting here together talking and so it’s like a collage i continue to

49:42

add elements from my story and a reminder and but also again my i’m a bit

49:48

i believe strongly in manifesting and projection and so just this is key to me because my brother who is uh

49:56

my nephew’s here his dad would always tell me write it down write it down spelling is casting a spell you want it

50:03

to happen write it down just don’t say it don’t just text it and write it down and so i have tons of lists that if

50:09

you’re to see my studio you see all these goals and dreams and and hopes on

50:15

these things yeah yeah and then

50:20

again outlines of different places countries and provinces and yeah spaces i’ve inhabited

50:27

and there’s just there’s just so many the drawing initially was just it was more of like a map and just tons of

50:33

lines of spaces intersecting into creating these abstract shapes and then over the last since january is when i

50:40

started painting it well that’s that’s that’s me

50:50

well that’s me initially i took this picture and it was a a selfie and he was holding a cell

50:56

phone but i felt that was like just a little too heavy-handed i’m like i’m obviously in the work you don’t need a fully

51:02

rendered image of my face i didn’t want it to be that so then i started thinking more and more about the draft jab jab or

51:09

the trickster eschew who’s always kind of playing jokes and has all the secrets and

51:15

like i said his little his tongue is sticking out as he’s like playing another game with everyone but

51:22

uh the jab jab horn and uh this was when i was in my marvin gaye vibe when i was always wearing a

51:28

toque rolled up and uh this was this was this uh was actually taken during my

51:33

first trip to china so but it represents me

51:54

[Music]

52:01

it’s not fun but i get a lot of satisfaction do you have paintings that were just fun

52:08

um or like some that are just you know you just have to get it out and it’s just

52:14

your heaviness kind of thing but there’s a satisfaction what

52:19

well you can you hear me i think it’s online yeah okay great so

52:25

uh the [Music] it’s it’s it’s all of that you know in the sense that there’s

52:30

paintings that uh there’s something that happened in 2015

52:38

and that’s particularly for this idea of urgency okay and in a painting

52:44

in 2015 i had a an accident and i almost died and when i came out

52:50

from the accident after recovering um it was during my graduating show

52:56

and at that particular moment i i was working on a book called story

53:01

of the eye from george bataille um i you should read it if you haven’t it’s

53:06

really good very funny book um and what happened is that

53:12

uh you know i literally almost died and when i came to myself

53:18

i i asked myself if this was my last show would it be about george bataille

53:24

story of the eye the answer was no all right and at that particular moment i had to

53:30

ask myself um

53:35

what is necessary for me right now because that i’m i’m an artist i do art

53:42

and i want to do it particularly for that show and from that point on with a sense of

53:49

urgency that doing it is necessary to me

53:54

i’m telling you that story because there’s certain paintings in that show where i

53:59

started them with a concept that was important to me at the time

54:05

but then the painting just took me somewhere completely different

54:11

you know and in the in certain pieces with a sense of physical urgency

54:17

not just like mentally but my body was craving for putting

54:23

something out and sacred burning is a good example in collision also why i’m

54:28

like okay i’m going to trace this trace that will be blind and when it started this is not what was supposed to happen

54:35

basically on the other hand sometimes i make pieces about i i did a piece of

54:42

ability or if i want to stay on in the show prophetess

54:47

uh two one or two anyways there’s there’s pro there’s one of the prophetess here where

54:53

i started with a strong concept and i had to build on that so it was more difficult for me to to slip right

55:00

and because i work with the formless with the incapacity to to grab something

55:06

sometimes i work with on several paintings because there’s some day i come to the studio

55:13

i cannot contain what i what needs to get done so i cannot work on that painting now i

55:20

have to focus on other things sometimes i stop i read or i call a friend do i have a beer

55:26

whatever i need to kind of uh myself you know when we were talking the

55:32

important being in the studio is not is mainly to spend time with yourself

55:39

you know that’s why i said of being an artist so far taught me a lot about my humanity

55:46

because i’ve learned to be patient i’ve learned to to sit with my anger i’ve learned to

55:53

um you know accept not having answers on certain things

56:00

so all of that thankfully was nurtured by a studio practice

56:13

oh you want anything you go for it yeah yeah okay um my my concept well my concept the way i

56:21

understand titles it’s always like that it’s like uh it’s like i stand right here

56:26

and i have a rock in my hand and i throw the i can

56:31

and where where where the rock lands that’s the title of the piece and by what i mean by that is

56:38

even if the title is really really far there’s always something uh coherent or

56:45

that is related to to me and sometimes the rock falls right here

56:50

you know what i mean and then it’s obvious that i’m trying to portray something a moment or somebody

56:56

um but title it it took me a lot of time to understand how important it was

57:03

because just like uh colors were the first signifier of the aura

57:09

of the piece because the first thing you the atmosphere the piece even by from far you can see

57:14

certain the colors are you’re drawn to them or not a title is also something that adds

57:21

another layer to um the

57:26

imagination around uh around the object that you did you know and sometimes it can be

57:33

precise extremely precise uh when i’m working on history for example

57:38

and sometimes you can and even emotionally also because there’s a piece that’s called the

57:43

unknown you know as if i could paint something that is perceived as

57:50

unknown you know and i’m interested in these concepts loyalty vulnerability

57:56

because it’s kind of impossible to paint them it’s impossible but i like i start i like to start

58:02

working when what i’m trying to portray becomes impossible for me to to do

58:08

because i that it means i’m starting in a space of infinite possibilities

58:15

and that’s where i like to work because it’s closer to my existence which is something that

58:21

is forever uh becoming to quote bergson

58:27

what you got i hate titling work um i yeah i am

58:32

i i i ask mike one of my close friends who knows my work we talk a lot about it to send

58:39

me titles and they’ll always deliver something that is much better than i would have come up with i never liked

58:44

titling my songs because i felt like the first thing would be very obvious and so um yeah i i contract that out to

58:51

someone i respect tremendously and they always come up with something beautiful that’s a that’s an interesting

58:57

collaboration because um you know it’s intimate and

59:02

and that person has a particular understanding of you we’re over time yeah because they

59:09

you did the work you know what needed to be done in the work and you know what you brought in each

59:14

work and that person also know what he brought or she brought

59:19

in terms of titles for each one you know it’s like a long story yes then the relationship is wrong

59:25

it’s like a story that is one sentence you know what i’m saying i woke up and then i got dressed and then i went out

59:32

and then the sun was out and then i didn’t and then i died and goes in three paragraphs of

59:37

you know which is interesting because you know time our existence like that time is is just

59:45

one thread that can be cyclical or lineal depending on what you believe in but

59:51

that thing is just going you’re going and going and going time for one more question

1:00:01

if

1:00:06

okay we’ll answer one more question and then we’ll

1:00:13

along the okay what challenges

1:00:20

i’m going to assume in the practice or like i think it’s the same challenges

1:00:25

everyone has in life the challenges of time confidence or

1:00:31

um [Music] energy

1:00:38

yeah what challenges i think in the beginning just the unwillingness to

1:00:45

make space for someone who has ideas that like for me with my ideas

1:00:51

and with who i am as a as a person and as a black person

1:00:57

as i think the biggest challenge is early on willingness to make space

1:01:03

for you yeah for your imagination yeah for yeah uh

1:01:09

can you re can you read what what are the challenges we face you face

1:01:18

um strangely enough i was raised in a

1:01:23

family that was very liberal you know so they’ve

1:01:30

bred bread breeding the bread yeah a certain confidence

1:01:35

to in me um but then

1:01:40

um when i decided to be an artist it was challenging for them because

1:01:46

because of the uncertainty that came with it you know what i mean so then they came to me and were like

1:01:52

are you sure is that like you know but then they gave me the confidence right so i could just say whatever i’m

1:01:58

just doing whatever i’m doing you know so i don’t know if it was a challenge but it was definitely a bump in the way

1:02:04

because they were projecting their fears on me

1:02:10

and and what curtis said uh

1:02:15

for occupying the space that we occupy there’s a lot of people that

1:02:20

puts their fears and their limits limitations on what we could be

1:02:27

in the world or who we are as a matter of fact not even what the future but also the present

1:02:34

so the challenge is con continuous it’s a challenge of

1:02:39

every day seeing the fears

1:02:44

of other people that are kind of diminish you and take away your dignity

1:02:50

at the same time uh so yeah that’s a challenge that is

1:02:56

continuous for me because i’m always expending in my head you know

1:03:01

like this year i know how to ride a bike next year i want to ride a helicopter the year after i want to ride a

1:03:06

spaceship whatever you know because because it’s fun you know it’s exciting i want to

1:03:13

live an exciting life thankfully i will hopefully hopefully i will

1:03:22

thank you all for your time and thank you for your online

1:03:30

you

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