[Andrea Zittel: Art & Design]
Joshua Tree is sort of unique;
it's two and a half hours from Los Angeles,
but on the edge of open desert.
So if you continue driving to the East,
it just completely opens up.
And everyone here kind of comes from somewhere
else.
I've been at Joshua Tree for fourteen years.
I wanted to live in a community that was outside
of the art world.
I really think that design should talk about
life and living.
It's really sort of interesting talking about
design, but through art.
Every space that I've lived in, I've turned
into an art project.
And, I think that everything in the house
has really evolved with my life.
The original part of the house is the kitchen.
And then on the back side of the kitchen,
there's a bedroom.
And then when I bought it, I ended up adding
the room that we're standing in--
this used to be the driveway--
and a bedroom for my son.
There's like this other question that I ask
myself that comes up a lot too,
and it's like that question of why to be an
artist and not a designer.
I remember thinking that if an art historian,
like, a hundred years from now
had to talk about my generation,
that it would be almost impossible to talk
about it
in, sort of, a significant cultural sense
without touching on what was going on in design
at the same time.
There's this, kind of, privileged position
of being an artist
where you can do things on a more experimental
nature
simply to see what happens.
You know, we have to order so many materials
out here--
we can't just go out and buy them.
And all these cardboard boxes would come in.
And for a while, I just stacking the cardboard
boxes on the wall
and putting things in them,
and thinking about how I could actually turn
them into,
like, some sort of more permanent structure.
I think that the ambiguity of how things are
meant to be used is deliberate,
and I think it becomes one of the more interesting
parts of the work.
I think it's really interesting if somebody
has one of these in their house,
they're going to decide if they want to keep
it pristine,
sort of like a Donald Judd sculpture;
or, if they want to start piling it up with
books
and stones that they find on trips and stuff
like that.
These are some of my favorite works and, I
mean,
it comes back to the grid.
And, I think that the grid is representative
of human aspirations.
I mean, everything is based on the grid--
the calendar, our schedules.
You know, it's about human perfection.
I love the tension where, like, this is trying
to be perfect--
and when we make them, we try and make them
really perfect,
but they just don't want to be.
I did two really big exhibitions of weaving.
Weaving, I had always thought about conceptually
because it's the grid.
They really seem like they have a lot of imperfections,
which is part of the reason that they're so
interesting.
We decided to do a really really big weaving.
We did a bunch of smaller ones and got really
confident.
[LAUGHS]
Maybe artificially confident.
But, like, in the process, we're having a
lot of problems with the warp.
[ZITTEL, OFF SCREEN] I hope somebody will
be watching this, who will, like...
"Yeah, oh those idiots, they shouldn't have
done..."
[WOMAN] "I can't believe they're doing that!"
[ZITTEL] Yeah.
[WOMAN] Maybe they'll write in.
[ZITTEL] They'll tell us what to do.
[WOMAN] Exactly!
[ZITTEL] It'll be awesome.
[WOMAN] Email us!
[ZITTEL] The warp is getting really uneven
and stretched out,
and so that's why we have all these blocks
of wood
and pieces of rocks hanging from it.
For the last few years, I've been working
with the idea of a panel,
and trying to find the intersection between
a very subtle, minimal object that's both
fine art and design.
You could say that design has power,
because it actually touches people in a much
more concrete way;
but, I think that art has more wiggle room
and more flexibility.
And maybe I am as interested in failure as
I am in success.