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LAKSHMI SINGH, HOST:
We're going to hear now about Trenton Doyle Hancock. He's a star in the art world, and he collects dolls. He has so many dolls and toys he needs a studio the size of an airplane hangar in which to store them. Hancock's work is in the permanent collections of leading museums, including the Metropolitan1 Museum of Art.
NPR's Neda Ulaby visited his new show in Philadelphia.
NEDA ULABY, BYLINE2: As a child, Trenton Doyle Hancock made up a superhero - Torpedo3 Boy. The character is now the center of a complicated cosmos4 Hancock's developed over 30 years. It preoccupies5 his drawings, paintings, sculptures and now a stuffed torpedo boy doll.
TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK: Well, he looks like me. He's a black guy. His face is basically my face.
ULABY: Torpedo Boy's a recurring6 character throughout Hancock's work and in this exhibition at Temple University's Contemporary Art Museum. The show is intended to reveal the connections between Hancock's massive toy collection and his celebrated7 art.
ROBERT BLACKSON: He's on the A-list.
ULABY: Robert Blackson runs Temple Contemporary. He says as soon as Hancock makes work, it's snapped up by fanatical collectors. But he does not cater8 to them. Hancock makes art entirely9 for himself.
BLACKSON: He has no choice. It's not something that he can walk away from.
ULABY: He's driven, Blackson says, by an intensely personal vision.
BLACKSON: He carries with him wherever he goes. He wears it almost wherever he goes. There's a truth there that you can't escape.
HANCOCK: I'm obsessed10 with my own childhood.
ULABY: For example, when you walk into this show, you're overwhelmed by bright reds, greens and yellows meant to evoke11 both a toy store and the tile in Hancock's grandma's bathroom. His stepfather was a minister and his mother a devout12 Christian13.
HANCOCK: She had an extreme flare-up of religion (laughter)...
ULABY: And would not let Hancock play with toys she found unwholesome. Partly in response, Hancock created his own fantastical alternative world he calls the moundverse (ph).
HANCOCK: Mounds15 are these half-human and half-plant creatures. They're kind of these dopey, big mound14 heaps that can't really move or do anything.
ULABY: The moundverse contains dozens of complex characters, including a goddess who controls color.
HANCOCK: And this color can be manipulated to fuel and different things.
(LAUGHTER)
HANCOCK: I know. It's (laughter) - I live in my own head.
ULABY: Many of the characters in Hancock's head appear in the show as dolls - shiny, plastic ones that are a little bit unnerving. As an African-American kid who did not own lots of black toys, Hancock's fascinated by what makes dolls objects of desire. He used to pore over the Sears catalog, analyzing16 toy packaging and production as a way of understanding social aesthetics17.
HANCOCK: Like, what was cute in the '60s isn't what was cute in the '70s and definitely isn't what was cute in the '90s.
ULABY: Hancock collects dolls he finds in thrift18 stores, often missing clothes and hair. He says that helps reflect on the values placed on skin and bodies. He only buys toys made from 1959 through 1990.
HANCOCK: The rule is, if I come across it at a thrift shop, I have to buy it from those years. (Laughter) That's why I have to have another warehouse19 to accommodate the collection at this point.
ULABY: Hancock took a group of young aspiring20 curators to the original warehouse last year.
IDA VILLANUEVA: I've never seen so many things - like, toys and colors - all at once. It's - like, that's really the most mind-blowing thing for me.
ULABY: Twenty-one-year-old Ida Villanueva is part of the Young Curators Council at Temple Contemporary. It's a project that trains young people of color from North Philadelphia to be curators. She's using Hancock's character Torpedo Boy as an inspiration for a workshop at a nearby Puerto Rican arts center.
VILLANUEVA: Families are invited - so parents and kids - to make their own superheroes based off of their cultural backgrounds.
ULABY: It's community engagement end, says Temple Contemporary's Rob Blackson, a response to a Mellon Foundation study that showed fewer than 10 percent of museum curators and leaders are black or Hispanic.
BLACKSON: That is way off the charts in terms of our own national census21 statistics.
ULABY: And in terms of the neighborhood where Temple Contemporary is located. Blackson also introduced Hancock, who attended Temple's Tyler School of Art, to a woman who runs a museum that's only a few blocks away. The Philadelphia Doll Museum only exhibits black dolls.
UNIDENTIFIED PERSON: For black children to see an image of theirself (ph) is a very positive experience.
ULABY: A short documentary about the museum is part of Hancock's new show. He collaborated22 with Barbara Whiteman on an exhibit inspired by the Clark doll test, where psychologists asked children in the 1940s to choose between a black and white doll. Most picked the white one. The results helped influence the Supreme23 Court case Brown v. Board of Education. The black and white dolls packing this room, says Hancock, reflect how toys have historically expressed a more limited range of possibilities for black kids.
BLACKSON: So it's like you're given a few options. It's, like, well, I can be this, this or this. But little white girls can be (laughter) that whole row of them with, like, 50 options.
ULABY: As whimsical as his work with toys might seem, artist Trenton Doyle Hancock says it's rooted in reality.
HANCOCK: And it's a very American reality.
ULABY: One he feels that needs a new mythology24 that reflects American histories and mistakes - the sort of mythology a person might start to invent as a child, maybe while playing with dolls.
Neda Ulaby, NPR News.
1 metropolitan | |
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2 byline | |
n.署名;v.署名 | |
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3 torpedo | |
n.水雷,地雷;v.用鱼雷破坏 | |
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4 cosmos | |
n.宇宙;秩序,和谐 | |
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5 preoccupies | |
v.占据(某人)思想,使对…全神贯注,使专心于( preoccupy的第三人称单数 ) | |
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6 recurring | |
adj.往复的,再次发生的 | |
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7 celebrated | |
adj.有名的,声誉卓著的 | |
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8 cater | |
vi.(for/to)满足,迎合;(for)提供饮食及服务 | |
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9 entirely | |
ad.全部地,完整地;完全地,彻底地 | |
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10 obsessed | |
adj.心神不宁的,鬼迷心窍的,沉迷的 | |
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11 evoke | |
vt.唤起,引起,使人想起 | |
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12 devout | |
adj.虔诚的,虔敬的,衷心的 (n.devoutness) | |
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13 Christian | |
adj.基督教徒的;n.基督教徒 | |
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14 mound | |
n.土墩,堤,小山;v.筑堤,用土堆防卫 | |
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15 mounds | |
土堆,土丘( mound的名词复数 ); 一大堆 | |
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16 analyzing | |
v.分析;分析( analyze的现在分词 );分解;解释;对…进行心理分析n.分析 | |
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17 aesthetics | |
n.(尤指艺术方面之)美学,审美学 | |
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18 thrift | |
adj.节约,节俭;n.节俭,节约 | |
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19 warehouse | |
n.仓库;vt.存入仓库 | |
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20 aspiring | |
adj.有志气的;有抱负的;高耸的v.渴望;追求 | |
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21 census | |
n.(官方的)人口调查,人口普查 | |
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22 collaborated | |
合作( collaborate的过去式和过去分词 ); 勾结叛国 | |
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23 supreme | |
adj.极度的,最重要的;至高的,最高的 | |
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24 mythology | |
n.神话,神话学,神话集 | |
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