How to pronounce "portfolios"
Transcript
(Applause)
(Applause)
I am a papercutter.
(Laughter)
I cut stories.
So my process is very straightforward.
I take a piece of paper,
I visualize my story,
sometimes I sketch, sometimes I don't.
And as my image
is already inside the paper,
I just have to remove
what's not from that story.
So I didn't come to papercutting
in a straight line.
In fact,
I see it more as a spiral.
I was not born
with a blade in my hand.
And I don't remember papercutting as a child.
As a teenager,
I was sketching, drawing,
and I wanted to be an artist.
But I was also a rebel.
And I left everything
and went for a long series of odd jobs.
So among them,
I have been a shepherdess,
a truck driver,
a factory worker,
a cleaning lady.
I worked in tourism for one year
in Mexico,
one year in Egypt.
I moved for two years
in Taiwan.
And then I settled in New York
where I became a tour guide.
And I still worked as a tour leader,
traveled back and forth
in China, Tibet and Central Asia.
So of course, it took time, and I was nearly 40,
and I decided it's time
to start as an artist.
(Applause)
I chose papercutting
because paper is cheap,
it's light,
and you can use it
in a lot of different ways.
And I chose the language of silhouette
because graphically it's very efficient.
And it's also just getting to the essential of things.
So the word "silhouette"
comes from a minister of finance,
Etienne de Silhouette.
And he slashed so many budgets
that people said they couldn't afford
paintings anymore,
and they needed to have their portrait
"a la silhouette."
(Laughter)
So I made series of images, cuttings,
and I assembled them in portfolios.
And people told me --
like these 36 views of the Empire State building --
they told me, "You're making artist books."
So artist books have a lot of definitions.
They come in a lot of different shapes.
But to me,
they are fascinating objects
to visually narrate a story.
They can be with words
or without words.
And I have a passion
for images and for words.
I love pun
and the relation to the unconscious.
I love oddities of languages.
And everywhere I lived, I learned the languages,
but never mastered them.
So I'm always looking
for the false cognates
or identical words in different languages.
So as you can guess, my mother tongue is French.
And my daily language is English.
So I did a series of work
where it was identical words
in French and in English.
So one of these works
is the "Spelling Spider."
So the Spelling Spider
is a cousin of the spelling bee.
(Laughter)
But it's much more connected to the Web.
(Laughter)
And this spider
spins a bilingual alphabet.
So you can read "architecture active"
or "active architecture."
So this spider goes through the whole alphabet
with identical adjectives and substantives.
So if you don't know one of these languages,
it's instant learning.
And one ancient form of the book
is scrolls.
So scrolls are very convenient,
because you can create a large image
on a very small table.
So the unexpected consequences of that
is that you only see one part of your image,
so it makes a very freestyle architecture.
And I'm making all those kinds of windows.
So it's to look beyond the surface.
It's to have a look
at different worlds.
And very often I've been an outsider.
So I want to see how things work
and what's happening.
So each window
is an image
and is a world
that I often revisit.
And I revisit this world
thinking about the image
or cliché about what we want to do,
and what are the words, colloquialisms,
that we have with the expressions.
It's all if.
So what if we were living in balloon houses?
It would make a very uplifting world.
And we would leave a very low footprint on the planet.
It would be so light.
So sometimes I view from the inside,
like EgoCentriCity
and the inner circles.
Sometimes it's a global view,
to see our common roots
and how we can use them to catch dreams.
And we can use them also
as a safety net.
And my inspirations
are very eclectic.
I'm influenced by everything I read,
everything I see.
I have some stories that are humorous,
like "Dead Beats."
(Laughter)
Other ones are historical.
Here it's "CandyCity."
It's a non-sugar-coated
history of sugar.
It goes from slave trade
to over-consumption of sugar
with some sweet moments in between.
And sometimes I have an emotional response to news,
such as the 2010 Haitian earthquake.
Other times, it's not even my stories.
People tell me their lives,
their memories, their aspirations,
and I create a mindscape.
I channel their history
[so that] they have a place to go back
to look at their life and its possibilities.
I call them Freudian cities.
I cannot speak for all my images,
so I'll just go through a few of my worlds
just with the title.
"ModiCity."
"ElectriCity."
"MAD Growth on Columbus Circle."
"ReefCity."
"A Web of Time."
"Chaos City."
"Daily Battles."
"FeliCity."
"Floating Islands."
And at one point,
I had to do "The Whole Nine Yards."
So it's actually a papercut that's nine yards long.
(Laughter)
So in life and in papercutting,
everything is connected.
One story leads to another.
I was also interested
in the physicality of this format,
because you have to walk to see it.
And parallel to my cutting
is my running.
I started with small images,
I started with a few miles.
Larger images, I started to run marathons.
Then I went to run 50K, then 60K.
Then I ran 50 miles -- ultramarathons.
And I still feel I'm running,
it's just the training
to become a long-distance papercutter.
(Laughter)
And running gives me a lot of energy.
Here is a three-week papercutting marathon
at the Museum of Arts and Design
in New York City.
The result is "Hells and Heavens."
It's two panels 13 ft. high.
They were installed in the museum on two floors,
but in fact, it's a continuous image.
And I call it "Hells and Heavens"
because it's daily hells and daily heavens.
There is no border in between.
Some people are born in hells,
and against all odds, they make it to heavens.
Other people make the opposite trip.
That's the border.
You have sweatshops in hells.
You have people renting their wings in the heavens.
And then you have all those individual stories
where sometimes we even have the same action,
and the result puts you in hells or in heavens.
So the whole "Hells and Heavens"
is about free will
and determinism.
And in papercutting,
you have the drawing as the structure itself.
So you can take it off the wall.
Here it's an artist book installation
called "Identity Project."
It's not autobiographical identities.
They are more our social identities.
And then you can just walk behind them
and try them on.
So it's like the different layers
of what we are made of
and what we present to the world
as an identity.
That's another artist book project.
In fact, in the picture, you have two of them.
It's one I'm wearing
and one that's on exhibition
at the Center for Books Arts in New York City.
Why do I call it a book?
It's called "Fashion Statement,"
and there are quotes about fashion,
so you can read it,
and also,
because the definition of artist book
is very generous.
So artist books, you take them off the wall.
You take them for a walk.
You can also install them as public art.
Here it's in Scottsdale, Arizona,
and it's called "Floating Memories."
So it's regional memories,
and they are just randomly moved by the wind.
I love public art.
And I entered competitions
for a long time.
After eight years of rejection,
I was thrilled to get my first commission
with the Percent for Art in New York City.
It was for a merger station
for emergency workers and firemen.
I made an artist book
that's in stainless steel
instead of paper.
I called it "Working in the Same Direction."
But I added weathervanes on both sides
to show that they cover all directions.
With public art,
I could also make cut glass.
Here it's faceted glass in the Bronx.
And each time I make public art,
I want something that's really relevant
to the place it's installed.
So for the subway in New York,
I saw a correspondence
between riding the subway
and reading.
It is travel in time, travel on time.
And Bronx literature,
it's all about Bronx writers
and their stories.
Another glass project
is in a public library
in San Jose, California.
So I made a vegetable point of view
of the growth of San Jose.
So I started in the center
with the acorn
for the Ohlone Indian civilization.
Then I have the fruit from Europe
for the ranchers.
And then the fruit of the world for Silicon Valley today.
And it's still growing.
So the technique, it's cut,
sandblasted, etched
and printed glass into architectural glass.
And outside the library,
I wanted to make a place to cultivate your mind.
I took library material
that had fruit in their title
and I used them to make an orchard walk
with these fruits of knowledge.
I also planted the bibliotree.
So it's a tree,
and in its trunk you have the roots of languages.
And it's all about international writing systems.
And on the branches
you have library material growing.
You can also have function and form
with public art.
So in Aurora, Colorado it's a bench.
But you have a bonus with this bench.
Because if you sit a long time in summer in shorts,
you will walk away
with temporary branding of
the story element on your thighs.
(Laughter)
Another functional work,
it's in the south side of Chicago
for a subway station.
And it's called "Seeds of the Future are Planted Today."
It's a story about transformation
and connections.
So it acts as a screen
to protect the rail and the commuter,
and not to have objects falling on the rails.
To be able to change fences
and window guards into flowers,
it's fantastic.
And here I've been working for the last three years
with a South Bronx developer
to bring art to life
to low-income buildings
and affordable housing.
So each building has its own personality.
And sometimes it's about a legacy of the neighborhood,
like in Morrisania, about the jazz history.
And for other projects, like in Paris,
it's about the name of the street.
It's called Rue des Prairies -- Prairie Street.
So I brought back the rabbit,
the dragonfly,
to stay in that street.
And in 2009,
I was asked to make a poster
to be placed in the subway cars in New York City
for a year.
So that was a very captive audience.
And I wanted to give them an escape.
I created "All Around Town."
It is a papercutting,
and then after, I added color on the computer.
So I can call it techno-crafted.
And along the way,
I'm kind of making papercuttings
and adding other techniques.
But the result is always to have stories.
So the stories, they have a lot of possibilities.
They have a lot of scenarios.
I don't know the stories.
I take images from our global imagination,
from cliché, from things we are thinking about,
from history.
And everybody's a narrator,
because everybody has a story to tell.
But more important
is everybody has to make a story
to make sense of the world.
And in all these universes,
it's like imagination is the vehicle
to be transported with,
but the destination is our minds
and how we can reconnect
with the essential and with the magic.
And it's what story cutting is all about.
(Applause)
Phonetic Breakdown of "portfolios"
Learn how to break down "portfolios" into its phonetic components. Understanding syllables and phonetics helps with pronunciation, spelling, and language learning.
IPA Phonetic Pronunciation:
Pronunciation Tips:
- Stress the first syllable
- Pay attention to vowel sounds
- Practice each syllable separately
Spelling Benefits:
- Easier to remember spelling
- Helps with word recognition
- Improves reading fluency
Definition of "portfolios"
Noun
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A case for carrying papers, drawings, photographs, maps and other flat documents.
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(by extension) The collection of such documents, especially the works of an artist or photographer.
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The post and the responsibilities of a cabinet minister or other head of a government department.Synonyms: ministry
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The group of investments and other assets held by an investor.
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A collection of assets generally.Example: "I would like to introduce you to our portfolio of services."
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A range of products.Example: "product portfolio"