Reimagining Reality with Everyday Objects (Gabriel Orozco) | Art21
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 8 ก.พ. 2025
- Art21 proudly presents an artist segment, featuring Gabriel Orozco, from the "Loss & Desire" episode in Season 2 of the "Art in the Twenty-First Century" series.
"Loss & Desire" premiered in September 2003 on PBS.
The segment follows Gabriel Orozco as he creates situations with objects on the street and photographs them. Orozco’s interest in logic, systems, and physics is revealed in his series of games and in the dramatic La D.S.-a Citroën car split down the center and reassembled to elongate its shape.
Gabriel Orozco was born in Jalapa, Veracruz, Mexico, in 1962. Learn more about the artist at: art21.org/arti...
Credits |
Created by: Susan Sollins & Susan Dowling. Executive Producer & Curator: Susan Sollins. Series Producer: Eve-Laure Moros Ortega. Associate Producer: Migs Wright. Assistant Curator: Wesley Miller. Production Manager: Alice Bertoni & Laura Recht. Production Coordinator: Kelly Shindler & Sara Simonson. Director of Education & Outreach: Jessica Hamlin. Consulting Director: Charles Atlas. Editor: Joanna Kiernan. Host Segment Artist: Charles Atlas. Host: Jane Alexander. Director of Photography: Martial Barrault, Bob Elfstrom, Mead Hunt, Ken Kobland, William Rexer, Joel Shapiro, & Dyanna Taylor. Sound: Doug Dunderdale, Jim Gallup, Judith Karp, Mark Mandler, Caleb Mose, Andre Rigaud, & Bill Wander. Gaffer/Grip: Chris Flurry, Jeff Howison, Alan Jacobsen, Michael Lamb, & Zach Zamboni. Assistant Camera: Jarred Alterman, Steve Banister, Cyril Mulon, Kipjaz Savoie, & Lieven Van Hulle. Host Make-Up: Joanne Nöél. Props: Jesus Aguilar & Sandy Handloser. Production Assistant: Eric Kutner, Guillermo Luna Rosales, Dawn Watson, & Yahia Zadek. Assistant Avid Editor: Anne Alvergue, Geoff Gruetzmacher, Jeremy Siefer, & Lynn True. Still Photography: Alice Bertoni, Bob Elfstrom, & Julie Graber.
Creative Consultant: Ed Sherin. Graphic Design & Animation: Open, New York. Animation, Visual Effects & Compositing: Spontaneous Combustion. On-Line Editor: Don Wyllie & Frame:Runner NYC. Composer: Peter Foley. Voice-Over Artist: Jace Alexander. Sound Editing: Margaret Crimmins, Greg Smith, & Dog Bark Sound. Sound Mix: Tony Volante & Soundtrack F/T. Animation Stand: Frank Ferrigno & Frame:Runner NYC.
Full credits available at art21.org/watc...
#GabrielOrozco #Loss&Desire #Art21
"I like to walk and observe things...enjoy them....The camera is a way to awareness" placelessness here means he is out of confinement, isolation and the bubble on his own in a studio is fascinating. Walk and talk is being intimate and trusting your openness to the world is simplicity as well as difficult because he is both outside capitalism and being told how to think and feel within the machine for creation and also enjoyed by major art galleries. This struggle and tension is not clear in his work but present because his walk around opens us to this through the objects he sees, his awareness. The supermarket with its dominant place in society also, playfully, opens us to placelessness and the fun out of place objects can appear to the camera and to catching our eye. Thanks for the documentary.
What a wonderful, clear demonstration of the creative process and how it’s always happening. Removing the safe space of the studio is very intriguing. Depends on what materials you need to express yourself of course. TY for a thought provoking experience.
Wtf, he is just a clown
wow. i deeply resonate with how Gabriel Orozco moves through the world. fantastic artist hi
Riveting ! What a beutiful ceative mind, yes the studio is isolating... profound that all the spaces between work and suataining life are lost !
I get curious about the upbringing of such creatives.
In my city a buch of friends founded an artist group who made intuitive art around observation an inner creation. We are called "Maleza Dispersa" (non comercial plants in spanish). I found his spirit very similar and we took shread paper from trash too! hahaha
Very nice. Very glad to encounter this btf artist!!
Great interview, capturing the process, the journey of creative minds ❤❤❤❤
Beautiful!!!!
Beautiful ❤ thank you
Gabriel Orozco🎉❤‼️✨️👌 You are Most Magnificent with Your Creations & SELF.
Thank YOU.❤❤ Cape Town
I love this guy
super padre! de mayor quiero ser como Gabriel!
Beautiful 🧬
A Stunning Video❤🎉
Thank You. CAPE TOWN‼️💐✨️
❤❤❤
looooooooooove
I was thinking how I couldn’t stand somebody like him around me!.. Because I am exactly a same type of person😂
pues no ocupa taller porque no lo necesita pues no trabaja con materiales plasticos convecionales por lo que tampoco podriamos decir que es un genio o todo lo contrario!
Interesante 🤣 forma de plasmar el proceso “cretivo” de HAMPArte, el ventilador con papel 🧻 higiénico 🤣🤣🤣. Deja de robar Orozco🤣!!!!
la neta!! está bien rara su onda, me acuerdo que en la escuela revisabamos su trabajo pero la verdad siempre me dejaba un vacío, no sé porque es tan relevante para algunos
I love & Appreciate the words & thoughts of the woman❤🎉💐🌿👌✨️ Classy to Recognize the Beauty of the Mind. XX❤💐
Cape Town
🤦♀
Puro m k - u l t r a. Incluso varios comentarios en este video son bots apoyandolo.
HAMPARTE
Philosophy exercise not art
literalmente el arte es filosofía, no algo que te parezca bonito nada más
@@adrianahealy4237 Todo arte es filosófico pero no toda la filosofía puede ser arte. El arte no necesita de la palabra para existir, el arte contemporáneo por su parte depende al 100% de ella. Caminar y ver basura, tomar una foto y filosofar es ocio de ricos.
Well personally I dont like this Artis for me he is like a person without any skill. Are hundreds of better creative people than this guy.. BTW the documental is so well done that makes him look like a real Artist
Interesting take. One could surmise you're subscribed to the art Channel which tells me you would at least know that art is subjective. A perfect example of this is how much I thoroughly enjoyed the video, the artist, his art and the philosophy behind all of it.