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  • (lively piano music)

  • Voiceover: "I will not make any more boring art."

  • Voiceover: "I will not make any more boring art."

  • Voiceover: This is repeated, over and over again,

  • down the length of a sheet of paper,

  • and originally down the length of a wall,

  • in column after column.

  • Voiceover: Clearly, this is like a schoolroom punishment.

  • "I will remember to do my homework,"

  • written over, and over, and over again.

  • Voiceover: We're talking about a work of art

  • that was made by an artist whose name is John Baldessari.

  • that was made in 1971,

  • first in the Nova Scotia College of Art & Design.

  • Voiceover: This is basically a form we already know.

  • We know it as a schoolroom punishment.

  • How is it transformed into art?

  • Voiceover: Well, I think that the idea that it was

  • in a gallery, that context was really important to the artist.

  • He actually has spoken about how he takes his word images

  • and makes them on canvas to give them that frame of reference.

  • Yeah, this is different than if it was on a blackboard in a school.

  • Voiceover: Let's think about the words for a second,

  • because it's not, "I will not speak out in class."

  • It's, "I will not make any more boring art."

  • It's self-punishing.

  • He's looking at his career and saying,

  • "I made some bad art, and in the future,

  • "I'm not going to make any more bad art."

  • Voiceover: He had apparently originally written the sentence

  • in his own private notebook.

  • That was the genesis of this.

  • I think it's important to understand this

  • within the broader context of his early career.

  • Baldessari had been taught, I think like so many art students,

  • to create, in a kind of abstract expression, a style.

  • Voiceover: We're talking here about Mark Rothko,

  • about Jackson Pollock, artists who were making

  • what I think of as very serious art in the 1950s.

  • Voiceover: Well, what this artist did,

  • was in 1970, to gather up all of the canvases

  • that he owned of his own work.

  • These were abstractions.

  • There were landscapes.

  • Then, together with some friends, and some art students of his,

  • he brought them to a crematorium,

  • and he had them burned like we burn bodies.

  • Then, he took the ashes, and he put them in an urn.

  • This was a way of creating, I think, a really [stark erupture]

  • in his career between this older style and his mature,

  • much more conceptually oriented work.

  • Voiceover: There is a way in which art was painting still,

  • even in the 1960s.

  • To make art, you paint it.

  • In "I will not make any more boring art," is labeling that as boring,

  • and saying "I'm going to do something different going forward."

  • Voiceover: But, even using the word "boring"

  • is hilarious and off limits.

  • Voiceover: It's true (laughs)

  • Voiceover: Because in the serious nomenclature

  • of the art world, you don't use words like "boring."

  • There's a kind of directness and a kind of humor

  • that's incorporated in this deep irony.

  • Voiceover: You can see that as an artist

  • the real challenge would be, what is interesting art?

  • What does it mean to make art that's sincere,

  • and engaging, and clever, and new?

  • Voiceover: It was also about the qualities

  • of new conceptual art.

  • If you think about, for instance, the work that people,

  • like Sol Lewitt, there's a kind of cool clarity,

  • which is also at the same time boring,

  • although you're not allowed to say that.

  • So, there's something wonderfully ironic,

  • but also irreverent about this.

  • (lively piano music)

(lively piano music)

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