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Louisiana Channel: Art (3 of 33)
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"If things are going too nice, you have to mess things up, trust your instincts." Meet the acclaimed British artists Tim Noble and Sue Webster while they work on mutual self portrait, using a blindfold as a method.

Tim Noble (b.1966) and Sue Webster (b.1967) first became known for their shadows portraits, created from sculpture-assemblages of ordinary things. In this interview they talk about how they continue to grow as artists while demonstrating some resent working methods.

They also talk about their relationship with each other, and how they each add something necessary. It is the fusion of opposites, which gives the work energy, Sue Webster says. It is a constant battle to keep the mind free and remember that "anything goes" - regardless of the expectations of the art world.

"If things are going well, you've got this inbuilt instinct just to throw a spanner in the works, and to mess it up, and see what happens" Sue Webster explains.

Noble and Webster mix strategies of modern sculpture and punk-attitude to make art from anti-art. Their work derives much of its power from its fusion of opposites, form and anti-form, high culture and anti-culture, male and female, craft and rubbish, sex and violence.

Interview by Jonas Hjort, 2013.

Recorded at Edition Copenhagen by Jonas Hjort.

Edited by Jonas Hjort.

Produced by Jonas Hjort & Marc Christoph Wagner.

Music by Tricky

Copyright Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art.

Meet more artists at channel.louisiana.dk

Louisiana Channel is a non-profit video channel for the Internet launched by the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in November 2012. Each week Louisiana Channel will publish videos about and with artists in visual art, literature, architcture, design etc.

Read more:
channel.louisiana.dk/about

Supported by Nordea-fonden.

 

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