Watch our May 26 discussion with Art Rental and Sales artist Paul Freeman regarding the development of his artistic practice. Learn more about Paul here: http://bitly.ws/dRvYWatch our May 26 discussion with Art Rental and Sales artist Paul Freeman regarding the development of his artistic practice. Learn more about Paul here: http://bitly.ws/dRvY …
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Paul Freeman
Paul Freeman
2:05
Paul Freeman
2:05
Process Where Did You Source Your Imagery
Process Where Did You Source Your Imagery
9:48
Process Where Did You Source Your Imagery
9:48
Do You Use Real Antlers
Do You Use Real Antlers
20:09
Do You Use Real Antlers
20:09
Works in Progress
Works in Progress
30:27
Works in Progress
30:27
Building the Sculptures
Building the Sculptures
50:39
Building the Sculptures
50:39
Use CTRL+F to find key words if it is a longer transcript.
0:04
hello everyone thank you for joining me today my name is rachel bouchard and
0:10
i will be guiding today’s conversation we welcome you to our from the studio series sponsored by
0:16
epcor’s heart and soul fund as well as the canada council for the arts here at the gallery we embrace the
0:22
teachings of tatawa a kree phrase meaning welcome there’s room in our house even
0:28
the virtual one everyone is welcome [Music]
0:42
oh
1:01
interdisciplinary art practice includes okay drawing photography digital image
1:07
creation and the creation of short animated films paul freeman attended the alberta
1:12
college of art design and was awarded the governor general’s award for academic excellence as a graduate of
1:18
1998. he received his mfa in drawing and intermediate from the university of
1:23
alberta in 2005. freeman is the founding artist at the nina haggarty center for the arts
1:30
an art center with developmental disabilities in edmonton where he was the artistic director
1:36
between 2002 and 2019 the art gallery of alberta nominated his
1:42
exhibition it’s only natural for the elder nan foot visual arts prize which he received in
1:47
june 2013. freeman was a recipient of the edmonton’s artist trust fund
1:53
in 2017 and has been commissioned by the city to create sculptures the new valley line lrt at avenmore
2:00
station so could you take this time with me today to
2:05
artist paul freeman
2:11
hi hello paul how are you thank you for joining me thanks
2:17
we really appreciate you taking the time well thanks for asking me yeah
2:23
so uh let’s just dive in so um this this series is printed directly
2:30
from objects that are placed on the glass of a photo photocopier um can you tell us a bit about the concept
2:36
that you’re working through sure when i was a a student at the alberta college of art and design i
2:43
started as a jewelry major or sorry i started as a yeah jewelry major
2:48
and in the course of the required drawing classes i i i don’t know if i was just feeling a
2:55
little bit cheeky or a little frustrated a bit of both i suppose i decided i could solve every
3:01
drawing problem presented to me with a color photocopier and so i started making images using one
3:09
of those old canon clc 700 color copy machines the first color copiers
3:15
that were out so around 1994 1995 i started playing around with the
3:21
color copier and in the course of those explorations i got so excited about what i was doing
3:28
that i shifted by major i left the jewelry program and i did what is called an
3:33
interdisciplinary studies degree so at that time at acad you you could
3:39
select a mentor to ask them to support you in developing a project of study that was
3:46
not really didn’t really fit in anywhere else and so i maintained my jewelry practice but
3:51
i did a lot of work uh creating images on the color copier and the image on the left of the
3:57
mallard yeah is um something that the alberta foundation for the art spot for
4:02
me pretty much right after i got out of art school i think okay and um eventually i left the color
4:09
copier behind it got harder and harder to access the machines
4:14
and to do such weird stuff and i and i just switched over to using a scanner but essentially
4:20
the process was the same going into the world and looking for or finding natural objects
4:27
often dead animals and then bringing them to the color copier or to the scanner and composing
4:33
on the glass yeah yeah i like the juxtaposition of the
4:38
live well i mean they’re not they’re not um i mean the cut flowers that are still
4:45
um they haven’t wilted as as in comparison to the the animals or the birds
4:54
yeah well for me the exciting i mean aside from the you know the exciting uh process of just
5:00
experiment and and play that you have a lot of this work you know i really got
5:05
excited about well the kind of impact it was having on other people and the opportunity to play with scales
5:13
so at a certain point all of these images got really really large like cinema screen scale images and you know i got really
5:22
interested in i mean on the surface it was about thinking about being vegan and thinking
5:27
about animal rights and things like that looking at them today i don’t really read them that way they’re much more
5:33
personal metaphor and kind of make me think about the life i had back then
5:39
but um the attraction and repulsion that happened with these dead animals
5:46
mediated by the image you know the way that you can be drawn into looking at all the detail
5:52
and then pushed back by the reality of what you’re looking at so for me that was the exciting part
5:59
yeah i i have a question for you um did you submit these pieces in your classes
6:05
paul um if so what did your professor think oh yeah i submit i was um that’s all i
6:11
would do i wouldn’t draw at all anymore so yeah i submitted them all i had the right teachers i guess they were able to buy
6:17
in to what i was doing yeah and willing to talk about them conceptually as drawings
6:24
at least and so no i got i got just
6:29
i got good feedback and i um rapidly shifted from thinking about
6:36
becoming a jeweler into being this guy who makes these photocopies and by the time i graduated that was me
6:44
i had maintained my jewelry classes to get my degree but my focus for sure was making these images
6:49
okay all right um all right so this slide
6:56
is this series was titled full frontal lobe is that right
7:01
yeah or sometimes i call it mind control tricks because for me that’s what this body of
7:07
work was all about you know um i’ve been a serial parent i have a 28 year old a
7:12
14 year old or a 13 year old and a four four-year-old and so i spent a lot of my life
7:19
like most parents confronting the reality that i was either going to develop some mind control or resort to
7:26
force and obviously resorting to force isn’t a great option yeah it made me think about all the mind
7:33
control i was engaging in yeah just as a survival mechanism
7:39
and as a way of um trying to be a good parent and uh then thinking more broadly about
7:45
the way you know particularly through media through images um there’s a lot of mind control tricks
7:51
going on whether it’s fast food or images of masculinity or femininity um i think we are
7:59
we are pushed around quite a bit so i was just kind of playing with that and the reason for the matador and the brain
8:07
kind of comes from looking at the history of of mind control technique and one of the
8:13
things that happened in the 60s was a a doctor named jose delgado started
8:18
putting implants right into antiballs and putting them in the ring with matadors
8:24
and controlling the ball and so that’s how it all got started
8:29
uh so um is there any play on the fact that you’ve you’ve only focused on the frontal lobe
8:36
and and there’s that disconnect between the uh parietal and the occipital and
8:42
and the temporal is that is is there is there anything to that
8:50
i don’t know how much of it was front of mind back then when i was making these works but
8:56
certainly today i have a a deeper understanding of my own
9:01
um brains the different brains inside my head and how often i’ve been uh through my
9:08
life been very driven ruled by maybe the lower brain and so in some ways i was thinking about
9:16
these as being like mind control sometimes is about um
9:21
ideas and thoughts but sometimes it’s about getting at the bottom of the brain activating more reptilian urges
9:28
yeah yeah and even the idea of the the um [Music]
9:34
uh the the lesions that would be created from in this case the the whip you know and
9:41
the consequence of that in the frontal lobe that’s interesting
9:47
um we have a question what was the process where did you source your imagery if you did oh sure absolutely
9:54
i like most contemporary artists i love google right love the internet it’s such
10:00
a great place to find images so in a lot of my drawing practice i have done quite
10:05
a bit of bucket filling where i just go online i’ve spent you know two days looking at
10:10
images of safari hunts and all those dead animals and just kind of filling the bucket with
10:16
stuff so i have folders in my computer full of images of well deer full full of images
10:23
of uh pinup boys and girls and so i have a mind control
10:29
bucket in my computer that i just started dumping things into yeah and i found this really great pdf
10:37
produced by the mayo clinic the big american uh hospital and so it was a document
10:44
developed people who were going to have surgery on their brain and in this pdf there was a 3d brain
10:51
that you could turn around wow and position at any angle so i use
10:57
that braid that john or the mayo clinic brain and the cursor to just manipulate the brain
11:03
into different positions and then he used photoshop and a kind of cut and paste
11:08
strategy to bring the images i was finding on the web together with these images of the brain
11:15
and then basically it’s a tracing project after that playing with line weights to try to create a little bit of space
11:22
and um you know i’m not i am not that that kind of draftsman who could just whip
11:28
this pen and ink drawing off in one flourish with no pencil marks or it’s a tracing project for sure okay
11:36
um i have a comment uh the limbic reptile brain exclamation mark
11:41
[Laughter]
11:47
okay so this one uh cervical rectus um what can you this guy has some
11:54
serious mutations um i’m wondering why you used a bach
12:00
and and why what’s with all of the mutate what’s
12:06
with the mutation sure i uh when i graduated from
12:12
the university of alberta when i did my master’s degree i did a whole bunch of sculpture yeah where animals children
12:20
were all getting they were mutating they were maybe getting infected by the natural world and one of those
12:26
pieces actually since i have it right here i’ll grab it um
12:33
one of those pieces was this guy who was on display at the shaw for a while and okay oh yeah yeah had all these
12:41
sticks growing out of him and so one day i was driving into calgary and i saw the big elk on the side of the
12:47
road cast elk on the side of the road and i thought hey wouldn’t it be cool
12:54
if i mean really that was the beginning of the project which i think is the beginning of a lot of projects
12:59
honestly um and then the real motivations take a long time to emerge for me
13:06
but those impulses are pretty strong and so i got inspired to take that idea that i
13:12
developed in my graduate exhibition and bring it into these deer and switch from sticks to antlers
13:19
and for a very long time i talked about this work as being about
13:25
a whole set of ideas that i don’t connect to nearly as easily anymore but certainly when i was drawing
13:31
and making these works um which were shown in uh an alberta
13:36
biennial these drawings they were the ins my inspiration was
13:41
always to make sculpture and came to my studio and visited
13:48
they said well we like the drawing so much it’d be a shame if you made sculptures that we only wanted drawings
13:54
why don’t you focus on drawing and so that’s how this big drawing which again the alberta foundation for the earth zones
13:59
was created and yeah for a long time i talked about these objects these animals
14:05
the drawings whether they’re drawings or sculptures as being about kind of a metaphor for
14:12
a growth-centered economy a metaphor for alberta kind of being all in on oil and
14:18
gas and not having a very diversified outlook so sort of like being all about
14:23
one idea or having one being over invested or like too much of a good thing and
14:30
then um in preparation for
14:36
so after these drawings were made yeah i applied to the alberta foundation for the arts and
14:43
a couple of years later to the edmonton arts council and got some money together to actually build
14:48
the sculptures i’d always dreamed of making they were it they’re easy to make now but they
14:54
were really hard to figure out at the time how to put everything together how
14:59
exactly to make it work and um
15:04
i had a great time showing these at the art gallery of alberta and even this was i don’t think i
15:10
this was in the rbc new works gallery okay at the art gallery of alberta and i mean as you can tell the aga has
15:18
been a very important part of my life for a very long time ever since i was a little boy i’ve been taking classes
15:24
there i got my first teaching experiences at the aga i had some significant exhibition
15:30
experiences there as well so i take a moment now to just thank the aga profusely for all their support over the
15:36
years i am very grateful to be asked to speak to you today and thanks to catherine and everyone
15:42
there for uh for helping me become the artist i am today so um
15:48
after this exhibition came and went i really couldn’t let this drop i put
15:55
another big proposal together i found some more money and i started a new project which was to
16:01
take these animals and now they’re deer not elk but these antlered forms
16:09
and do a whole new exhibition which um i showed at gallery 501 in
16:15
sherwood park and at la citate over at the faculty genre and that’s
16:22
is from 501 is that correct this is from 501 this image is from 501 yeah the two shows were fairly different in
16:29
terms of one had everything hanging at eye level and the lassi day show had everything hanging
16:34
way up in the air but that would be so yeah yeah the perspective of that
16:42
gold that the gold um hanging ball of antlers is is behind me now in in my house say
16:49
it lives in my living room now but prior to this exhibition you know
16:55
i’ve been writing i’ve been talking i’ve developed artist statements all that stuff i didn’t feel right about it i was
17:03
feeling more and more and more uncomfortable as the exhibition date loomed that okay
17:09
why so aside from the fact that i was not sure that that big black and gold
17:14
sculpture wouldn’t fall down on the ground it had only hung in my studio for about 18 hours before i hung it up
17:21
so i had some serious moments of of dread over the weekend but mondays are still hanging there and
17:27
it’s still fine um but i was i had um
17:33
been seeing a counselor for a couple of years at this point and so i had a pretty good relationship with her my life had
17:39
undergone some pretty big change and i was um i’m very grateful to janet for all the help she’s given me but one thing
17:45
that she did for me was she came to my house she sat in this room with me which had
17:51
seven of the sculptures hanging from the ceiling so we were under this fairly oppressive cloud yeah antlered
17:58
deer and we could maybe slip to the next side and show okay show what those look like oh no
18:03
it’s the one after i guess okay we’ll go back to this one yeah
18:09
so we sat underneath all of these and they were packed quite tight together and i just
18:15
said i don’t believe i know what i’m doing i don’t believe i know what this show is about
18:20
i know there’s something much more important happening here why did i have to make nine of these
18:26
things i already made two like what am i trying to say to me myself
18:32
that i’m not able to hear that’s making me do this over and over again and i had
18:39
like i said to you before what feels like a very simple set of thoughts but they were
18:44
hard to come to epiphany i think often seems easy after the fact
18:49
but i just came to realize that these works were much more about discovering that
18:56
through a lifetime you can acquire a whole set of coping mechanisms
19:02
strategies for survival that may be worked at one point in your
19:08
life but without letting them go you can’t really move on so essentially yeah i think i was saying to myself over
19:14
and over again maybe you gotta let these antlers go maybe you gotta let your antlers drop
19:19
maybe you gotta set aside some of your defenses right and
19:24
so for me the show really didn’t come together until kind of a day or two before exhibition
19:31
and then i was really able to speak about it and i think a much more effective way and i’ve always thought gosh i need to
19:37
go back to this work and finish the show i need to have a set of sculptures where
19:42
this buck has shed his antlers he’s reintegrating into the herd there’s like a coming back to the group
19:51
after realizing that you’ve got all this stuff over so for me it was a pretty big deal
19:57
yeah yeah of ego or status whatever that that the symbolism of the
20:04
um the antlers are um okay so i have a question for you do you
20:10
use real antlers so the antlers of course they were like
20:15
they’re cast from life but i have molds that i’ve made so okay i have some real antlers i also have some
20:21
plastic antlers that i bought from taxidermy supply and i make my molds and
20:26
all of these are cast with a product called smooth on 320 which is a
20:32
off-white two-part resin and i put some stuff i forget the
20:39
technical term but it’s like a micro balloon it’s a little glass balloon
20:44
so that my you know my whole idea behind this project was to try to keep these animals as
20:50
light as possible and so i think each animal weighs about 150 pounds
20:56
which is not bad considering it only weighs about 60 pounds before it has all its antlers on it
21:02
so um yeah the whole project if anyone’s curious is a
21:09
polyurethane core with an arbiter inside and then for this for these sculptures i
21:17
used a product called freeform air which is a two-part epoxy clay again full of these micro bubbles
21:24
um and i i skinned all the foam with that with that epoxy i used
21:31
the styrofoam or silicone pad that i made i stole some marks from a very very good artist named
21:38
cheryl angel over at nine of hegerty i got one of her discarded uh lino plates and i made
21:45
a silicone stamp from her marks that i used to texture all the
21:52
clay on the outside of these deer and then there’s a fairly complicated
21:59
again a simple idea when i finally came up with it but all these antlers have to come out
22:04
for shipping for transport and all these animals have to hang upside down so
22:09
basically i don’t know that we can see it very well in these pictures but every large antler is on a square
22:17
rod that goes into a square hole inside the body that’s shaved with aluminum so it’s like
22:23
a metal hole that the that the a metal tube that my square stock can go into and
22:29
i’ve drilled a little hole through the tube into my square
22:34
and i have a small antler on a threaded rod that goes through a nut
22:40
and spins in and locks the antler in place so every big antler is paired with a small antler
22:45
and there’s a kind of key and lock system to keep everything together it took me a very long time to figure
22:50
out how to do that and it was one of those um falling asleep after having filled the bucket
22:56
with how am i going to solve this problem falling asleep one day i thought plastic
23:01
straws wait a minute nothing will stick to a plastic straw and i found a way to set up channels and
23:08
guides and get all this stuff to work so the technical part is always
23:13
pretty fun you know yeah and the dreaming app is always a lot of fun right
23:20
right um i have another question for you was there a difference in how they read
23:27
that you were exploring regarding different uh the different hanging heights
23:32
from one show to the next well i sure read differently in my mind as i was building
23:38
the project lassiter was always my spot okay i always thought that would be a great
23:44
place to put these because there’s so much vertical space the height um are there they they were quite
23:51
different shows i mean you’d have to ask someone else who’s not so intimate with the word
23:56
dude just just the idea of them hanging is like a cloud above you and then it’s like now you’re talking about consciousness
24:03
and you know subconsciously you know how ego gets in the way often
24:09
and and so it would play on that for me depending on on the height of it where
24:15
it felt more like a cloud hovering above rather than i um at eye level
24:22
yeah i think there was a little more of an exuberant atmosphere in the last city show when
24:28
things were up this was well obviously much more in your face
24:36
oh so should we go back to the chair do you want to discuss the chair okay i i love that piece i just think
24:44
just the idea of whoever sits on that and then having the protection from both sides
24:49
but um or maybe it’s defense being defensive
24:55
well i made this piece for uh an opportunity again at the aga they had a refinery party around
25:01
halloween okay and so i was invited to make something for the show and again it just kind of came to me
25:09
i could see this object in my mind i got pretty excited about how to put it together
25:14
yeah and what was really fun was the night of the party they set up a light so that people could
25:21
take their photographs in the chair it was really fun to watch people sit in this thing oh that’s and
25:26
how immediately their their whole body would change and they would all adapt these crazy
25:34
haughty kind of power driven poses and for sure the pieces of you know when
25:41
i look at it now i see these arms reaching forward the king’s arms reaching out to get you
25:48
and it is it’s this kind of i think a bit of a push and pull there’s this uh
25:55
feeling of being protective but there’s also a a pretty offensive pretty like there’s no getting
26:02
absolutely a person sitting in the chair i love it and i think for me in the statement kind of about
26:09
you know feeling like you can just take whatever you want that the that it’s sort of like this
26:16
feeling of um i think i called it potent take like you can just this attitude of the
26:24
world is yours for the taking seems to be the attitude most people adopt when they sit in the chair
26:30
yeah i we have quite a comment from sarah she said so many people have told her that the chair reminds them of the
26:36
show hannibal oh yeah i get that a lot for sure do you really
26:42
[Music] i mean i haven’t seen any of that i’ve seen it all now haven’t seen any of that
26:47
when i worked on this work but yeah those references are pretty common for sure uh [Music]
26:55
all right and now this no and again i’m very grateful to the aga for having it in their shop at art sales
27:01
and rental i don’t know how it would handle that share at home between the dog and the kids like it really needs another spot
27:08
so i’m very grateful that they’ve given it home yeah yeah well you could use it as
27:13
your you know your uh recliner
27:18
it’s the power position the kids you know when you’re talking about mind control when i’m laying down the law what i’m
27:25
saying you won’t like what happens next yeah oh so tell me about this drawing this
27:32
rendering i guess yeah these are just this is for the avenmore
27:38
lrt the project we’ve been talking about the project for four years it’s been
27:44
a very long process of figuring out the engineering the uh
27:52
maybe the simplest way to put it is that there’s a big space off in between the idea of making things and the making of
27:58
things right and so bringing those spaces closer together so i can actually make
28:03
the thing has taken quite a bit of time and because the placements of these sculptures
28:08
there’s a sculpture or an art project going up on every station in the line um
28:15
so steph johnson i know was doing new tart there’s a bunch of artists mutart sorry uh doing doing stations
28:22
hers i think is going to look really really great i’m excited to see it and um
28:29
i love every sculpture is going on top of the canopy that you would stand under when you’re
28:34
waiting at the station so when i made this drawing i thought i was going to be able to put all three
28:40
together on one canopy that’s no longer the case but the forums have basically stayed the
28:45
same i’ve kind of been lifting from my the antlers of a dilemma exhibition
28:53
taking those forms but really pushing towards because this is a public work
29:00
everybody’s gonna look at it um i mean i love all those antlers sticking
29:06
out of these creatures i think it’s awesome but not everybody does not everybody reads it the same way
29:12
and for me for sure the goal and the writing that i did in order to to get this commission was i
29:18
wanted to make something really fun and playful that sort of referenced
29:24
how exciting it is when you encounter an animal in the river valley at least i’m always excited when i see something
29:30
and um how fun it is to slide down hills that’s the basic idea oh yeah i would
29:36
just like last i would like people to see the work and smile and
29:43
and you know whether you’re going to work or coming home in the morning that it offer a little bit of a bright moment in your day and uh
29:51
so for me that’s fairly different from the way i’ve thought about working in the past
29:56
making yeah for a long time you can see it like the shedding of the antlers you
30:02
know especially the guy on the left he’s just you know he’s he’s having a great time
30:10
well that’s my goal is that they will read as as playful and not tortured not screaming but like or not screaming
30:17
in they’re screaming out of joy you know yelling for joy and um
30:24
yeah it’s uh it’s i can’t yeah if we have time i can show you the works in progress today
30:29
and uh yeah i’ve got uh a guy he’s actually jill stanton’s uncle
30:37
jill’s a pretty well-known artist in our community she’s uh her uncle is doing the forging for me to
30:43
create the armatures that are going to go inside these sculptures so my processes kind of the same
30:50
although materials have shifted quite a bit because these guys are going to be exposed to the weather 365 days a year
30:58
so i’m shifting the fiberglass as a coating and i was just about to yeah my coating has
31:04
changed we’re really really concerned about
31:09
water getting in anywhere so my goal is to encapsulate the whole object right from from hoof to antler in
31:18
in fiberglass epoxy so okay i’ve done an experiment it seems to work it works a lot better
31:24
than i thought it would actually i’m very very happy with the results so yeah i feel like this is all coming
31:29
together there’s still some questions to answer in terms of connection points on the roof and stuff
31:35
but we’re getting there and so and yeah i hope to have it installed by september 15th that’s my
31:41
goal oh good good well the 14th the 15th is my worst 15th yeah okay
31:50
uh okay so these are um how are these made and do they stay this color
31:58
yeah so i um as you said your introduction i was the artistic director at the nina for
32:05
a very long time yeah beginning and had a great time there uh really great time but i realized at a
32:12
certain point because i’ve um still got a young child at home
32:17
and uh anyway to make a long story short i decided that i needed to
32:23
[Music] take a bit of a leap and put more emphasis on my own practice
32:29
before it was too late so i started calling it freedom 50 and it decided that i would leave my job
32:35
at 50 and and push out into the world and so
32:42
one of the things that happened to me while i was thinking about making that change
32:47
is i was watching television with my son my middle son and he was really into this cooking show
32:53
at the time and i watched these chefs debating who would be the ultimate winner
32:58
and as they all talked about innovation breaking with convention challenging the viewer all that stuff
33:06
probably the most interesting chef leaned into the group and said you know i think the chef’s job is to
33:12
bring delicious food to the table and i sort of sat back and thought right
33:18
i could think about that a lot more than i have i’ve been pleasing myself a lot and not
33:24
necessarily thinking that hard about bringing the commercials to the table yeah and exactly right
33:32
thinking about it in terms of like if i’m gonna make this shift i have a family to be responsible to i
33:38
better figure out how to turn some of this into a way of making some money and so these candy colored antlers
33:46
um and some of the other works i’ve been doing are about trying to enter that space a little bit
33:54
could it make something that uh is pleasant and appealing and that a person might
34:00
want to bring home without letting go of everything i’m interested in and you know the reality
34:05
is i have these malts they were very hard to build they’re very expensive to make so the more i can
34:10
make out of them the better uh and yeah my ambition for them
34:16
i suppose in a you know aside from the very pedestrian like let’s make some money
34:21
um i was really excited about the possibility of taking these objects
34:27
that always read as kind of dangerous hard you know threatening yeah and make
34:33
them feel like they were fragile make them feel like they would break if they fell on the
34:39
floor or melt if you put them in water or so to kind of use a little bit of
34:45
juxtaposition in the materials choice the reality is they’re pretty tough the
34:50
resin is pretty strong but my goal is to make them look like they’re pretty pretty fragile
34:56
yeah we have a comment um that they should they should be lollipops
35:03
i’ve thought about it my silicone is the wrong kind of silicone if i were to do it safe i’d have to
35:08
remake the mold in a food grade right otherwise but it would be cool
35:14
to do a hard like a rock candy or something yeah and sarah’s just reminding um everyone that these pieces are
35:21
available in the shop aga uh it is wonderful to have your artwork at an accessible price point for your
35:27
fans yeah and uh these are interesting too
35:34
because you know visually the hands that are supporting the the base of the table
35:40
make me think of antlers as well yeah i mean there’s definitely a
35:46
relationship there and you know i showed them to uh heather hamill
35:51
who’s now the st gallery and used to be art sales rental and their first comment was oh how very
35:57
cocktail of you and i said yeah i’m wonderful
36:05
so yeah i mean i want to make something that’s fun and uh viable but i have a hard time letting
36:10
go of the weird you know so i’m trying to bring them together and these last
36:17
pieces are sorry i have another question with regards to the hands um are these molds your hands oh yeah
36:25
they’re my myths for sure okay and as and is there um
36:31
is there what’s the context of that what is is there um a meaning to that
36:38
they’re just the ones i had available yeah when i say them won’t no okay no
36:46
no in fact i’d like to use some other hands yeah have my heart another big sometimes
36:53
are you a big bruce norman fan bruce salmon fan sure i like bruce quite
36:58
a bit yeah i like his um heads on the studio floor i don’t know if you’ve seen that
37:03
one it’s wonderful oh are they projected onto forms
37:11
well yeah it’s like a whole bunch of golden heads and it’s like basically photographed i haven’t
37:17
seen that one oh it’s great uh all right so and these these are also
37:24
available at the um at the aj shop is that right correct yeah and so again it’s more
37:33
well of silicon mold made okay you know with the deer skull for
37:38
sure it’s a question of sealing it all off so that um the silicone doesn’t leak into the
37:46
pores of the bone and just get married to that forever so varnishing and sealing and then a fairly
37:52
complicated mold right you know three-part mold made in latex and
37:58
and uh the antlers the antler molds all that i mean they’re fun i love them but
38:03
man they’re a lot of work it’s like 50 50 screws every time you take it apart
38:08
and really long seams to clean up and i love them but there are a lot of labor so
38:14
the goal on these lamps was to have a mold that had no seams
38:20
and so um they’re pretty simple objects what i love about them is that
38:25
every time i pour one it’s a surprise you know i mix up all my colors i get all my little things together and then
38:31
yeah the plastic sets up fairly quickly so it’s kind of like okay it’s go time let’s go and i start
38:38
pouring things in and every time i pull the mold apart i’m surprised at what happened inside i like the kind of
38:45
experiment that happens
38:51
all right and here’s the the little guy that you just showed us is that right i love it yeah so these are pinocchio
39:04
yeah things so so yeah one thing that happened here was
39:10
when i did this body of work so i worked for i guess probably at least a year at the u of a developing the exhibition
39:17
at a certain point i stole this process this way of working
39:23
from an artist named mel chen who’s in those art 21 videos okay he was talking about being blocked in
39:30
his studio and he went to his friend and said i
39:35
don’t i need help i don’t know what to do and so his buddy said well
39:40
tell me what you love to do in the studio and he said well i love to make things with my hats and so his friend
39:46
said all right as a way of getting unblocked you’re not going to make anything by hand
39:51
you’re not going to do that you’re going to take your favorite thing and put it aside okay and i have found that to be a very
39:58
important and useful tool over the years to just ask myself what do you love doing
40:05
and then to just gently slap my hand and say stop that for a little while you know so for a long time was very
40:11
focused on copiers and scanners and like eventually well when i started my practice at the u of a when i
40:18
was doing my graduate degree i said okay you love all that gear put it away
40:23
they’re gonna make you teach drawing you better figure out what you’re doing like put it away and so i did and likewise with this
40:30
series of children that are all infected with plant forms i recognize that when i was doing these
40:38
altered sculptures my first move was always to chop the head right off
40:43
and go from there switch the heads and so for this body of work i said okay
40:48
not allowed find a new answer you know and i think that’s an important strategy at least for me to use i find
40:57
i’m recapitulating myself endlessly so i better find new ways to do it right right it’s important to kind of
41:03
shift out of your rut once in a while so i’ll often ask myself what’s my favorite thing
41:09
and then just ask myself to stop it for a while try something else yeah well and there’s
41:15
something about revisiting it after you’ve explored whether it’s drawing or writing or
41:20
it must have taken the work to a whole different level after leaving it for a while
41:28
yeah i think so and definitely it’s been you know it’s i i feel like
41:36
it kind of the that the when you know everything what it’s going
41:42
to look like before you even start you’re in a kind of a bad spot you’re in a baby a worse spot than
41:47
where you don’t know what to do it’s maybe a better spot to be in so i think in a simple way i try to put
41:54
myself there yeah put yourself back where you don’t know what to do and try to figure it out again
42:00
yeah um okay so i love i love this piece on the right it’s wonderful what
42:08
what can you tell us about these words right well um
42:15
i did it a little i guess it was a class of sorts
42:22
before the hdrc boondoggle that happened like in the late 90s
42:27
and all that money got shut down at the federal level there was this really neat class that was offered for graduates at
42:34
acap so we were paid like a part-time wage
42:39
to come and do these business development classes for artists
42:45
at a college in calgary and one of the guys that was teaching these classes was a photographer
42:51
named monty green shields he lives in calgary and so i was you know i it was actually
42:57
pretty good important experience for me because i started this process of like let’s figure out what
43:02
your business is artist and i immediately did 180 and said well
43:08
i guess that better be a jewelry business because like how could you make a business out of this other stuff that’s crazy right
43:15
and like making photocopies of dead animals that’s not a business yeah and so i wrote up a whole business
43:21
plan about how i was going to be a jeweler and all the things i was going to do and it made me so unhappy yeah i just
43:29
threw it in the bin and i said no my my business is paul freeman makes like cinema scale images using color
43:37
copiers and dead animals that he finds on the side of the road and that’s the proposal that i ended up writing for the
43:44
business plan that i wrote yeah and um i did an exhibition at the call paul
43:51
kuhn gallery in calgary i had a couple of chances to show monty the work not just in slide but in the real and he
43:58
said well i know you’re moving back to edmonton you know because i wanted to be uh near my daughter at the time
44:04
and so i was hot in fact i was driving from edmonton to calgary to do these
44:09
classes but regardless i was encouraged by monty to contact catherine
44:14
and tell her that he had told her that she needed to see my work this is monty from paul kuhn gallery
44:21
this is monty from this business class okay in calgary anyway he said i
44:27
think you’re ready paul you need to call catherine and just get her to look at your work and so i did i phoned and i said hi you
44:34
know i’m paul freeman and monty green shields told me that i had to tell you to see my
44:39
stuff and i was able to get katherine to come for a visit yeah maybe i brought stuff to her i
44:45
don’t remember anymore and it was kind of like really exciting
44:51
and and then crickets i wasn’t sure if i’d made an impact at
44:56
all and maybe four months later i got a phone call from catherine and she said i have this vision for this show
45:02
i have this space for you and i want to include you in this exhibition so a year out of art school i had the
45:09
chance to put this this um 740 page image up it’s about 40
45:14
feet long and it’s all stretched out uh and can you explain that process a
45:21
little bit more like how would you actually um so you say when you’re saying you’re
45:27
actually putting all of these images up it’s it’s in base like it was
45:32
would be like a pixelated version of the entire in image right yeah so
45:41
that’s the very first they’re on just color copy paper just 11 by 17 sheets of paper it’s a
45:49
nightmare if you can imagine trimming all those edges and can i get to light up
45:55
yeah anyway and lots of work and i’ll never forget the um praise i
46:01
got from catherine when we did the show because she was like paul you just came in bang that up
46:07
like yeah that would be that would take some time anyway yeah i
46:13
had a plan and just scaffold and stuff we anyway the the way i made it was i got i got a
46:21
bunch of snakes and a bunch of mice and some seeds and some flowers and all my materials
46:28
yeah and then i i got a long piece of acetate that was about three times as long
46:36
as the platen or the glass that’s that you put stuff on when you’re making photocopies
46:42
right and so i would compose my image on the acetate
46:47
so there’s the glass the acetate and then all my stuff on top of that and make my pictures and then slide it
46:55
all along and compose more and make more pictures and then pull it farther
47:00
and so that’s how i ended up with this continuous image that is longer a different shape than the color copier
47:07
itself and these pieces of paper on the wall are one generation removed from the
47:14
first pictures so those old machines you could take
47:21
anything that you put on the glass and have it spit out a four by four image so it would magnify it right from
47:27
the glass four by four and then i took each of those 16 pages and blew them up into 16
47:34
pages making 256 perception and there’s three sections on this in this piece
47:41
yeah and how long how long did the did it take for you to install this
47:47
piece a day and a half i think wow pretty quick
47:52
pretty quick yeah i took a lot longer to cut all the paper again yeah but yeah putting it up was
47:58
pretty easy yeah and what about the one on the left
48:03
what is what’s this one about well
48:12
i it was again one of those moments where i was saying to myself this was right when i was starting my
48:18
graduate degree at the u of a and i was very very invested in this idea of
48:23
i’m going to make these weird little sculptures and then i’m going to take those sculptures and put them in the real world and i’m going to make 100
48:29
million photographs of them and then i’ll collage those together into some kind of picture
48:34
and yeah this one was a little bit different in that i started playing with scale and things like that
48:41
but i think it also became the piece or is like okay paul
48:47
time to go somewhere new and so this was the last one i was like okay no more
48:53
no more playing with computers no more playing with cameras like you’re gonna draw you’re gonna
48:58
sculpt you’re gonna figure out how to make those things work together and so for my whole time that i was
49:04
studying at the u of a i sort of put all that stuff to bed but prior to that i’ve had a really great time playing
49:11
around with reconfiguring sculptures and then uh collaging them from photographs that
49:16
i’ve done in either in the garden or out on a camping trip yeah something like that
49:22
well it certainly is all fed into your works and and you’re currently for the most part you are you’re you’re
49:29
sculpting at the moment right that’s your primary yeah yeah i’m uh
49:38
i don’t know yeah right now i’m sculpting and this lrt thing is taking over um
49:45
yeah i think maybe i don’t know other yeah we’re down to the wire yeah
49:53
i think i don’t know what’s next it’s it’s a little terrifying but it’s
49:59
also an important place to go i’m not sure what will happen again
50:04
i’ve got to tell you making big stuff has its problems so this idea that you
50:10
could right sorry what’s this this idea that you could make something digital
50:16
and store it you know in no space it has a lot of appeal yes so i i’m curious about making movies
50:23
again i’m curious about but honestly i don’t it must take longer
50:29
right now it might it must take over your space like your home
50:35
you said this has been ongoing for a couple of years now at what point did you actually start building the sculptures
50:43
well it took a long time to get the design and fabrication packages approved
50:48
because there was so much back and forth engineers and yeah the project team i’m not complaining it just
50:54
it just took that long so i think i started sculpting in earnest in like january but there’s been a lot
51:02
of starting and stopping because until we know that it doesn’t matter the technical details but until
51:08
there’s engineering i’d be foolish to build the armature right it’s foolish to go too far so i
51:14
roughed out my forms i got the sculptures working in ways that made me happy right but now i’m in the process of of
51:22
putting the armatures inside i can’t tell you how i look forward to having legs that don’t snap every time i look at them
51:28
i’m just it’s been very frustrating building those sculptures but when you’re saying the armature in it’s
51:36
the metal the metal rods for support well why don’t we go see perfect look i’ll take you there
51:43
so you can see my living room and and here’s one of those really big
51:49
images right taking something natural and blowing it up to okay a massive scale i can’t see what
51:57
you’re seeing so that makes it harder oh yeah there you go yeah
52:04
oh that’s wonderful [Music] just the guy i made oh so good
52:11
yeah there’s a few of them around in here there’s these guys they’re pretty cute oh wonderful
52:18
there’s atlas sun whoops you know sculptures from nina lots of work from
52:24
rhino in the house of course yeah my wife nicole gollus is a very accomplished painter so
52:31
yeah with plenty of her stuff around too
52:38
yeah we have a few comments here too
52:55
so great to hear and another saying i really enjoyed your antler metaphor
53:00
great work paul
53:07
oh did we lose you
53:17
it looks like we’ve lost paul there’s um so with that um are there any other
53:24
comments that you’d like to share yeah we have it says that he’s left the
53:31
room um so with that um thank you all very much for joining us
53:36
and uh i’ll forward any messages that you’d like to leave for paul
53:42
oh there he is he’s back he’s back to say goodbye
53:48
hello paul
53:55
hi hi we lost you there for a moment sorry i think someone unplugged my modem
54:02
outside and so i started losing my signal it was all set up to go
54:07
um if people really want to see it i’m sure i can make it happen in like two minutes but i’ll have to run and do it
54:13
we have um well we’re we have six minutes okay uh i should share the comments for
54:21
you as well sure because you wouldn’t have heard them uh we had a comment saying that they really enjoyed your antler metaphor
54:28
and great work paul another thanks for all the insight you’ve given us into your practice over the years so great to
54:34
hear um so and then janet is excited to see what’s next
54:40
and um yeah that’s that’s all for now
54:45
so if you’d like do you want to try and get it going or do you want to wrap it up i bet it’ll work it’s
54:53
probably just a question of plugging one thing in so okay if you guys don’t mind i’ll run out for one minute and see if i can get it
54:59
to happen sounds great yeah so as we mentioned um there are a
55:06
few pieces like uh the two pieces in this slide that you can get
55:12
um at the aga shop so if you’re if you’re interested
55:17
especially like these antlers are fantastic if you’re interested you should check them out um and sarah says let’s do it let’s see
55:26
the sculpture there we go
55:51
hi paul can you hear us
55:57
yeah it’ll be really exciting exciting to see have a sneak peek of the work in advance they just look so playful and even just
56:04
to see the scale of it um i’m i’m interested to see what the
56:10
uh how he’s supported the armature can you hear me i sure can
56:17
oh
56:30
you’re you’re good we have hi hi i can’t hear you oh do you want to check
56:37
your try your audio i turned it on again now i hear you okay good stuff and now your video there
56:44
we are all right we’ll see okay all right so let’s have a sneak
56:51
peek i hope we’ll make it yeah
57:00
so far so good yeah yeah we’re doing
57:10
great
57:16
oh it looks like we’ve frozen again
57:24
oh oh sorry i think we’re having technical
57:30
difficulties here i can hear you but the the images bummer
57:36
oh yeah it’s on is it working now uh i can’t why can’t i it’s
57:41
mine is frozen at the moment oh it’s darn there it goes
57:50
um we’ve lost signals so i think we will just um does anyone have any comments that
57:56
they’d like to leave for paul before we wrap up today’s session
58:03
oh it says paul’s back [Music]
58:11
[Music]
58:20
yeah okay but i can see you now it seems to be
58:27
breaking up a bit but
58:32
oh no sorry paul has left the room again
58:37
um thank you so much everyone for joining us today um it’s been an honor speaking with paul
58:44
i i can hear you paul but i can’t i guess it’s not gonna work sorry no worries
58:50
no [Music]
58:58
yeah the image is still frozen but i we can hear you i can still hear you okay
59:06
yeah i i guess sorry it was working the other day but no worries that’s my faith well we’ve
59:12
had a couple of comments uh no oh here we go here you are
59:20
there we are sorry hi okay guys we have a couple of comments
59:27
a home studio visit would be great was one of them and uh yeah wow
59:35
thanks for hosting and then paul another thing uh a studio visit in person is
59:41
is is in order so yeah so i guess we’ll just wrap up
59:49
for today but thank you so much for taking the time it’s been it’s been a pleasure talking well thank you
59:55
yeah and um well i really enjoyed it likewise and uh the ada
1:00:02
is in closing uh the aga team continues to work hard to bring you art creative
1:00:08
projects to do at home and engage with you daily if you have further questions please reach out to us at info
1:00:14
your aga.ca and is there anything more you’d like to add paul
1:00:21
no just that again i’m you know super grateful to the aga for asking me to be here today and uh
1:00:28
just to acknowledge that you know they have given me lots of support over the years i’m very grateful to have them in
1:00:34
our city yeah that’s that’s wonderful thank and thank you for sharing that
1:00:41
thanks and thanks again have a a wonderful rest your day and until next time stay stay safe stay
1:00:49
curious and stay connected okay thanks very much you’re welcome
1:00:54
have fun have a great day bye you too
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