Miriam Nielsen

01

interviews

05:23

Mark Bradford Interview: Layers of Violence

โ€œI pillage my own work. I tear it down and build it up in traces.โ€ Let us introduce you to American painter Mark Bradford, who doesnโ€™t use traditional paint but material โ€œthat has something to do with the social fabric of the times we live in.โ€ Instead of paint, Bradford uses liquefied paper, which shares similarities with paint. He uses billboard paper from the streets or building material from any building supply store. Instead of โ€œlooking in,โ€ which he finds to be typical of modernist painting, Bradford has chosen to โ€œlook out.โ€ Bradford feels that his way of working on canvasses is aggressive, even violent: โ€œItโ€™s like tearing into the body. Itโ€™s very physical. Itโ€™s like if I just took my hand and reached in and pulled out the heart and then yanked it out.โ€ Mark Bradford (b. 1961) is an American painter. One of Bradfordโ€™s concerns is improving society with his art as well as through a number of social projects. His work can be found in prominent international venues such as San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, REDCAT in Los Angeles and Saatchi Gallery in London. In 2014 Bradford was presented with the US Department of Stateโ€™s Medal of Arts. He lives and works in Los Angeles, California. Mark Bradford was interviewed by Marc-Christoph Wagner at his studio in Los Angeles, California in January 2016.

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