tv Arts.21 Deutsche Welle June 6, 2022 12:30am-1:01am CEST
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lisa is the real deal. she's a real world famous artist, a criminal, a. crim are crazy about her. jesus is on that. these are the alexio's, a special person, just a bundle of energy. and we were just as fascinated by her as by her artwork. dot com. mm . jonathan think it's, chris, that i think is an artist. you totally have to learn to formulate thought should that they turn into what you mean to create with . mm mm mm ah,
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the good was fall nichols when phosphorus carbon and so forth. the human body is made up of $24.00 elements. this month is more than the sum of its spots. that's all it is the last one. ah, this is how it looks when i lead sick. vauder creates a self portrait. she reduces the human body to its elementary ingredients. cool and precise. ah, born in 1979, been cut off its poland. she has risen to become one of the most successful artists in germany. her expansive sculptures and installations have a special place in private collections and museum exhibitions and audiences love them. she is enjoyed world wide renown since designing the rooftop garden on new
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york's metropolitan museum in 2019 isn't out of law. so my view is only see the highlights and not how the whole thing takes forever. or how you exhibited work and 100 like garages. no one's interested in that it will be coming from the very beginning. she received support from collectors, cotton, and christiane morris. the couple showcases her work in a former bunker in berlin meto district. what fascinates them about her art that alicia alexia is always asking question often, and i find that courageous, like i'm one other does mom, she even questions things we all agree on in our culture and society weren't to constantly asked. but why? oh, so for this payment, she questioned and examined all systems in place is team is whether earlier currency, the time system or, or statistics are lou
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ever again. spies her proud chest. a very analytical element to it and life touch welfare for it. at the same time, something very poetic, precise, and downright scientific and chocolate of crowded thought, the home of these and am dea manhandled, why diamonds have a particular price or gold plan? why do they say a gram costs? i dunno. $32.00 euros and $0.80 is that who decides that cost that much? what are the forces in play creating the supposed reality? and the more you look at it, the more you realize that everything has just been completely made up. of course, there's no natural reason why something costs a certain amount or claims to be such and such. and i think i've always had problems with these alleged fundamental truth or belief or it had the x i was but maybe also since i'm from poland, maybe because everyone's catholic. that of maybe because every one there runs to
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church and you don't invite the devil into daily life. i don't. but what devil are they talking about like and why anyway? and why am i supposed to buy? like i said, it's all just so strange. i've always had a hard time just accepting when someone says that the way things are that the so just believe up to it and what is nearly took brauders ideas are the result of highly concentrated research, drawing and writing ah, inter studio. she works with her team to turn her thoughts into art and art has been a guiding force in her life since she was a child. and methodist was historic at godaddy in for in dallas and cut of it. my father is an art historian and used to run a gallery and cut of it's a poland. my mother is a cultural scientist and everything always had to do with art art history or history in general. mm hm. which is what meaning it was normal for me to constantly look at church gables paintings. i wasn't aware of the possibility of existing
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outside that. well, the sienna ah, my father always may join competitions for me and all my cousins. there would be 5, right? kids? yeah, we'd get a topic and we'd have to draw something based on out or whatever. and since i was the youngest one, i had to give it everything i had to half way. keep up with this and i did laying on my pipe fix of him. it's ohausen, basilica, martha moon. as an in demand artist ali tick water is always working on several projects at the same time. she's currently preparing a big exhibition in berlin. several sculptures and public places, and a new series of pieces for private collectors. her studio is a research lab material warehouse and workshop in one is up by me with scansion
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alice the time. i think everything would quickly collapse for me if i didn't have the possibility to do a lot. and for some reason it's kind of like a perpetual mobley. the fall on the machine runs, the longer it keeps going, as though lego bribes all of that. so i'm not quite a studio discipline is key. the various production processes are perfectly inner coordinated and deadlines. set the pace to day up to 30 employees work on her projects. ah, la la isn't cancer as i say now, her entire production has grown and she employ several people. mia loiter and, and a chef taste. he had, she basically has a factory now. he em luda had so i'd say she's also covering market demand to keep the stretch for a life to a little i in just
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a short time elisia bada needed to expand her operation to meet the demand of the art market. hey, sorry. hey, sorry i got held up was look, i also have to dash over to egos for the concrete topping stuff up with. okay, thank of. thanks. that looks great. thank you, kevin. okay, marie, go ahead and mark which ones those are i should have sent. not put in and also would you be able to make the other thing look a bit nicer. you know, here as the here. kevin, i just have these visitors to morrow. probably we just need to open this and then whatever we have probably will hang this here. thankfully with the scope of material is did i think on homelessness? i, of course, everyone thinks of reuben's and to 60 employees when an artist is very successful and has to produce a lot. of course they're not going to be building their own canvas at all just by alyssa and the li check father when you think of it works with giant pieces of
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stone. so she needs employees and a well organized studio afford close. i think the mark of a successful artist is great organizational skills soon as 5 men. ah ah, ah ha, i'm fungus is forgotten. me. if it's at 1st, i found it really difficult to take any help. because i couldn't imagine having anyone else on the same space while i was working from bonnie's, even just physically being banking, it seemed like a terrible idea. i put it off for ages us against lavish, as things changed very slowly. for a long time i had no employees on i days,
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cider and because i also had the weekend ment i had at least 3 days week for myself, a weekend the enemy. but at some point that was no longer possible. and as i said, this was over, it's been a learning process. and what i'm trying out now is having my own area, that's where we are now. and when i'm here, it means my employees should mostly leave me alone with. i'm also totally happy when i can be here in the evenings avenue. ah. of this with my little one's enough space of eventually this will become some sort of office space or something but, but right now i just have an incredible amount of stuff. summary. i don't even know what it is. anyway. i collect all kinds of things and that endless lamp and also parts of lamps. isn't there mechanical, clockworks, i clunk way or is it really old mantlepiece clock life?
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and i've been obsessed with looking for the same objects. but use one, they're like the coupled particles of matter. hubbard. i look for the exact same thing produced at the same time. let's say made in the 20s, but one from mexico and the other from i don't know norway. and then i put them back together on the pedestal, so it's lobbied on the stuff. i don't think she's interested in hoarding material. her for obsessed with winning things up says this through gazette. that was the boring of she is obsessed with using these things to go are i and was that so i'm she deploys them as incisive leah's stones and a piece of jewelry. so potent, clear to the work is like a piece of jewelry will be and the objects emphasize her ability or oh, young on to pursue, he needs things that are highly charged gosnell from buffer balls. i'm sure she has piles of things. she doesn't yet know what to do with. oh,
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but eventually the one hope she'll know was, was to them at mock. about more of a sufficient stanalin, a cat is as to the turnaround thing here. may be not closer to that limit because really what the turnaround is quite a nice work in a minute. i'm not sure it's in here. if it was, i would have come across it again. confused my. oh no way. there's a turn around for nicholas wilmington. obviously on the line, i haven't seen this work in a 100 years let and smith at the end of it, we didn't. it's not our display right now, madison. i love it. it's called turnaround. doesn't our dentist yet? it might have been 2009 when i did it. but it's just a section of a burden. staircase, barrister, on up some of them, but then it's mounted on the wall like this and the one that's the moment when you change direction. so this is i think that so beautiful and fits the hand so nicely . food. so food and is often hunt by sheila
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ah, preparations are underway for the exhibition in up fees and tide, or in absence at the barely nisha gallery in the german capital. a li chick father's own heartbeat is the show soundtrack, emphasizing her presence or absence. the sculptures play on her personality and also physical height. and ellis, boston, all of these are bronzes, phones laid on top of each other. and here you see my team, law, me greg, go kevin and valentine. as the tallest at to 7, the smallest is lauer at one and a half liters. plus there's an unknown giant of 3 and a half meters tall and b, their portraits in a way. and they all correspond to someone's height width of an image. the artworks arrive at the museum i li chick florida is personally involved with the installation. she's very clear about the times when she wants to retain control
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retain. an exhibition in her hometown of berlin brings an additional challenge. and in it's it's, it's difficult because you absolutely want to exhibit in berlin because you live here. but berlin scares me the most. mm. an added but because it's berlin, i've developed an exhibition that formerly very different from outside the museum, a sculpture titled self portrait, his ghost welcome visitors made of bronze. it's a shrouded depiction of the artist herself. it's life size. ah, i emphasize that a 5 is one experimentalist because i think it was sort of like an experiment. i
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said ok, i'll try to look at myself as an option as a sort of biological object in a certain period of time. because i'm quite interested in the human object as an a current interval. see it for the show with the belinda shad gallery at each chick vauder had her personal dna read than paper it onto the museum walls. her heartbeat is transmitted live into the space directly from a smart watch she wears during the exhibition that makes her state of mind immediately audible. including on this monday morning, just a few kilometers away. the group exhibition diversity united is taking place at the former temper. hope airport. it brings together art from all over europe. ok. ok. ok. that's great for these 2 to rate or invite us snarling has deliberately placed
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for the next a male heavy weights georg buys and it's an answer num kiefer. but at 1st glance, gotta isn't quite convinced. oh, it's reality which is always between a dream and a nightmare at home. she gets in touch with the studio. she's decided she wants to show another work here. mother has the own. then fin marie, do you have any film of the work? you don't get a good sense of it from photos of it. it would be great if you could send it to me quickly. can you off one another province of it's and now she just needs to convince the curator hello via her. hello val to her. it's fantastic. i'm so impressed. warm and to be in the space again. yeah. those, those of you knew what special either there, everyone taking part has their own style. whether it's you, adrian, jumping me, young,
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painting or limb. so law much of their own signature. that would be his own opinion frontier. rhonda got it. i understand you're all unique, but it all works together. yes. so it looks great and it's working well in the space. i can tell you like it, i, i really love it and that, but i go in because there's something i want to get a room back. i'm temperament. heaven and all that will be taken away. if i know this is, i think it's really great since barrett and i just had an idea. i think we need bottled us, but wait a minute, i have the work ready? absolutely. i would, and i think it would fit so great here. you know, this one is pretty nice is really would be so incredible here 3, it's a rock and we could hang it so that it's a bit higher handkerchief. oh my god middle is like a home. amazing. right. and yon has to work in the warehouse saying, laura, she is also an artist when it comes to diplomacy. inter gambit pays on. just in
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time for the opening, the exhibition incorporates our needs, her father's idea. but between negotiations and studio management, how much time does a successful artist have left for creativity? as mrs for me, a work is complete when i've managed what's the most important step for me? this is to formulate my thoughts in such a way that a physical artwork will eventually come out of it. and i achieve that using almost no tools that just a pencil in a sheet of paper. but that's it. 2 ah mine, my artistic process is still an incredibly intimate one with her. i'm here and can only really be on my own. i listen to some music and in the best case scenario, it's a moment of total joy. you're quite euphoric and could just shout out how great everything is, though that can all change really fast is open. it's almost like being in
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a permanent manic depressive states of permanent molars with thing. everything was starts with a bruin, though, naturally, there needs to be a thought behind it and to formulate that thought, i need to make a sketch. so i make several sketches and try to consider, okay, what might work and what doesn't work. as well as to imagine the sizes, and as soon as i have a drawing, i sent it usually as a simple cell phone photo to my team late at night, along with an incomprehensible email which i always dictated to my phone and nobody understands at all. and i say this is what we're doing now is usually the schedules incredibly tight, which is something i wish to change, but likely never will. then things take off quite fast to put out of a middle working company here in especially rented building. chronos, working on a huge commission for a private collector. ah, the production costs
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a lot run into 6 figures. here with nicole says, a big sculpture called linear land is being constructed here, and then it'll go to a private collector in texas that i think it will be displayed in a semi public space. it will, i hope, will be open to the public. good. but i don't know that yet. yes. and slowly coming together and should be finished in february. i believe. let's see if the welding seems, have been removed. ah, provider monitors such details because she also needs to keep an eye on production costs. it's the only way to ensure her ambitious projects remain profitable for gallery owners and her studio. ah,
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there's no counter sync yet, but oh, it's nice that it still needs to be flat. yeah. love i. yeah. there's no counter sync at all. yeah. but of yeah, but it quite elegant. okay. perfectly fine. there are projects that require certain production budget. i project the costs, make a budget, and hope that a gallery will finance it as soon as they financed it. i hope that the work will sell, so they'll get their money back. at 1st you earn almost nothing on these projects, but that allows me to build the next one. this creates a basic sense of trust that folks aren't investing their money for nothing. if they give me $500000.00 euros 3 times than the warehouse would fill up and with all the cost of some of the movement and storage always costs money. is lambda who do that? i can't ask that of anyone that person doesn't exist, victory, the person kept as me was ok can. it's quite exact. it's on a $1.00 to $20.00 scale that proportionately. it's just like the real thing. you
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can tell that from the person standing here, mr. kelly. mr. koenig exactly his group, but at some point alisium meet her goal to do bigger projects because she finds some exciting one from that. and that's how it work or snoop of him or you set yourself coolers. work had somebody go home, he doesn't have to do much to convince me exactly. he just says, it'll look like this and to the ahmed, that's the framework of this was i'm, can we do it together? and almost always i say yes. when you suck, i'm in my yog. though nothing works, without the gallery owners, they're only tick, thought us, most important partners. she's even found representation abroad. since 2012, the renown gallery cml manure has even shown her works, embarrass! ah! with a marvelous artist and one of them was interesting artists of her generation kit.
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i'd seen some of her works with shiny, really question. what contemporary sculptures you need is for the century. oh, to be an artist who creates objects for public spaces, galleries, and museums pedagogy regards. that's true. there's also attention, something extremely powerful in her work or from the premises when i met her. and i was extremely surprised to find a particular professional singers because i'd imagined her to be more physically imposing for chris saw quite more come with you're happy installation. her parisian galleries believes elite, has worked, have great potential on the french art market. and she's determined to make it big in france. b as this late like this. i mean right now going to grab, there's a great musicality to lizzie's art, but there's also something graphical and sonorous about it yet. i don't want her
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work as a sense of time, but it's also very spatial to aunt. ah, you're really like a toy. it's like a caricature. it always makes me laugh because this operational just the way you to match and it was, this is quite different. and of course, the buy is a different to generally the americans like to buy big, huge things and right away here the madam was like to have a little something nice on display in the bathroom. again, i know that the germans at turn keep a very low profile. they're often bourgeois industrialization, though you'd never even recognize them as such. and they have incredible collection of the outdoor him unless we can go to. i saw your them on both of them. but colorado has no time to enjoy the sights of paris. back in berlin, work is started on a new big project. alita kata has been invited to take part in the sculpture exhibition, desert, x and california. as always,
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her concept begins with pencil and paper. this sketch will act as a blueprint for the artist and her team in the coming months. clever hamilton think of that as an artist. i think you have to learn how to formulate your thoughts in such a way that then later become what i want to create. mentally you have to pursue your vision in such a systematic and logical way that it can be realised somehow. and of course i learned from that 1st impulse that's may be half dram hoffen counted voice half, who knows what exactly and how to reformulate that into the chain of events which is necessary to produce the desired result type of when i agatha dinner vendor is on band, this is an a, there's a difference of mm ah,
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oh course on file. i get an adrenalin rush when i have an exhibition here and then a project results. you speak the whole dealer and get to show it off. and then you have to set a price and see if you can offer a discount or a packaged younger. i think that super and great fun to somehow i think it just helps you get better and better and better and better. ah ah ah,
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the opaque world who's behind the benefits. and why are they a threat to us all opaque worlds this week on d. w? ah ah. business d w. news live from berlin. dozens of voice appears. have been killed in nigeria. gunmen opened fire in a crowded church in armando state, a rare attack in that part of nigeria. also on the program. moscow takes aim at ukraine's capital brush.
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