Fresh Air - Painter Titus Kaphar On 'Exhibiting Forgiveness'
Episode Date: October 24, 2024When painter, sculptor, and installation artist Titus Kaphar's life was upended by his estranged father, he turned to film. First he decided to tell his story in a documentary, but scrapped the projec...t when it felt unsatisfying. His new feature film, Exhibiting Forgiveness, tells his story and brings his paintings to life. Kaphar talked to Tonya Mosley about his journey to healing. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Support for this podcast and the following message come from the NPR Wine Club, which
has generated over $1.75 million to support NPR programming.
Whether buying a few bottles or joining the club, you can learn more at nprwineclub.org
slash podcast.
Must be 21 or older to purchase.
This is Fresh Air.
I'm Tanya Mosley.
And my guest today, contemporary painter, sculptor, and installation artist Titus Kaffar,
is known for taking classical forms of art and deconstructing them by cutting, crumbling,
shredding, stitching, tarring, twisting, and binding to reveal hidden truths that challenge
historical narratives.
His art provokes, forcing the viewer to confront the erasure of Black Americans from our historical
narrative.
Take his 2014 painting, Behind the Myth of Benevolence,
a portrait of Thomas Jefferson peeling away to reveal Sally Hemings,
an enslaved woman that Jefferson owned.
His 2020 Time magazine cover, Anagolis Colors,
depicted a mother holding the silhouette of a child,
which Gaffar created by cutting into the canvas.
The image references George Floyd,
calling out for his mother
during his arrest and final moments.
Kuffar, whose paintings and art installations
can be found at some of the world's
most prestigious museums,
has now taken his vision to the big screen,
deconstructing his own life with his directorial debut, a
raw and deeply personal film titled Exhibiting Forgiveness. It's about a celebrated painter
whose carefully constructed world unravels when his estranged father, a recovering addict
seeking redemption, suddenly reappears in his life. It's a searing exploration of forgiveness, asking us who deserves it,
who owes it, and at what cost. Titus, welcome to Fresh Air.
Thank you.
If I'm not mistaken, this idea for the film was originally a documentary, right? How did
it turn into a feature film?
The documentary happened because I was going back to Michigan, where I'm from, Kalamazoo,
to visit my grandmother.
And when I got to my grandmother's house, my father was sitting on the doorstep.
And I had my sons with me, and my wife was with me.
And they'd never seen him before.
My kids were probably about seven and five or something
like that at that time. And I basically told him I didn't really want to talk and that
this wasn't a good time. So I walked up the stairs, walked into the house and to my surprise,
my father followed me and now this is my maternal grandmother.
And so as I was starting to get a little frustrated
about the situation, my grandmother said,
baby you need to talk to him.
And I say this all the time, but when my grandmother
tells you to do something, you do it.
There's no question.
I had a camera on my shoulder at the time
because I was gonna take a photograph of her,
I was gonna make a painting and drawing of her. And so, kind of on a whim, I said to my father, if you
want to talk, let me film you. There's a lot to be accounted for. And I was hoping he would
say no, but he said yes. He said, be in my house for 15 minutes. And that was the beginning
of it. And the truth of the matter is that documentary felt wildly
unsatisfying. I showed it publicly in the theater one time and decided I don't
want that in the world like that. Why? What was it about it? A lot of it was just
the fact that if it felt like it did a really good job of telling me where
I was but not how I got there, it was me as an adult reflecting on these things as an
adult. And there was no space for that child, that child's voice in that documentary. And
somehow that felt really necessary. So as I let go of the idea of the documentary project
that I moved in to the idea of doing this as a feature film,
I realized that it was going to be necessary for me
to think differently about my father when I write him
as a character.
This changed your creative process
because you were writing and also painting
this story at the same time.
This was the first time you had actually done
something like this.
Yeah, I mean, the writing process was very different for me.
And so what happened is I'd wake up in the morning
about five o'clock and I'd start writing for a couple hours
take my kids to school and then I would go to the studio and I would I would
Start drawing or sketching from what I had written the day before
So I have this app on my phone that allows me to listen to text
So I was listening to that and remembering all of the things from my childhood
experiences and
and just writing that down. And initially I was writing this stuff for the purpose of trying to tell my sons a little bit about about their father, me, about where I come from and, you know,
why I don't like to talk about when I was a kid so much. And for their whole lives, I've always said,
well, I'll tell you when we're older.
They would ask.
Yeah.
They would ask.
Yeah.
And so my oldest is going off to college now.
So I think that's part of what initiated
this whole process for me.
And the painting aspect of it is so, that's so normal.
That's my happy place.
That's peace, you know?
I'm a pretty extroverted person,
but that's only because I have all of this time alone
in the studio.
So that part felt normal, felt right,
and it made the writing process easier
because the writing process was far more emotional than I expected
it to be.
Like the process of sitting down writing made me remember things that I had pushed out of
my mind for a long time.
And I also, as I took it from reality and moved it into the script, it actually became
more difficult when I was moving it into the script, it actually became more difficult when I was moving it into a script.
Because if you are writing a character, you have to be honest about that character's motivations.
You can't just say, this is a bad guy. And as a young man, I would have told you that
my father was the villain of my narrative. He was the bad guy. It wasn't until I sat
down to write and I had to ask myself, no, no, that's not enough. Why is he doing what
he's doing? What are the motivations for his actions? What are the broader context of the
world? Yes, that's right. You grew up in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Yes, that's right. That was a place
of industry, of factories, of businesses. And yes, that's right. That was a place of industry, of factories,
of businesses. And yes, that's right. By the time you were in high school, all of those
businesses, so many of them had been shut down. And so there were no jobs. There were
a few opportunities. And yes, that's right. Crack cocaine came in right at that same time. So with context and writing and asking myself the motivation for this
character, I gained a compassion, a sympathy for my father that I never had as a young
man.
Titus, this story isn't completely autobiographical, but there's truth, so much truth from your
life in it. For those who haven't seen the film,
can you say what the story is?
Terrell is an artist living with his wife,
who is also an artist, a musician,
and you have a young son.
He has a young son.
Terrell has a young son.
I have too.
I think fundamentally this film is about one artist's journey towards healing.
Of course, there's this question of this father who reenters the situation and whether or
not there will be reconciliation or forgiveness between them.
And we go with this family on this journey. The film for
me is about generational healing. About how does this generation make sure
that our children don't have to carry the same wounds and baggage that we carry. Is
there a way for us to leave it here so that they can go on without that burden?
And in the film the artist Tyrell and his wife Aisha, they figure this
out through their artistic practice itself. The thing that I'm most excited about is in the film,
you see the practice of two artists connected,
caring for one another.
It's not generally the picture of an artist
that you see on film.
There is such a vulnerability in this film.
I mean, we are seeing black men emote and express and cry.
And we rarely see that in film.
Actually, we don't see that for men, period, let alone black men.
What have been the discussions with your sons, you writing this with the intent of being
able to show them that, hey,
this is what my life was before you were here.
Yeah.
I mean, there's a moment in the film where Jermaine, Terrell's son, runs in the house
and starts jumping on the couch.
And I love that scene.
Daniel, the young kid who played that part, he was, he's extraordinary.
And he comes in, he starts jumping on the couch and I wish I would run into the house and jump on my mother's couch.
I wish I would.
That would be a very short scene.
But, but Terrell, he walks in and he gently grabs his son by the shoulders and he looks
him in his eye and he says, breathe.
I want you to breathe with me.
Let's take a breath together.
And what that's about is giving the next generation different tools than we had.
We weren't told that it was okay that we could cry. That was something that we had
to suppress. That was something that was necessary for us to hold in. We grew up in a kind of
rough spot. You didn't want people to see you weak. That meant you were vulnerable.
And if you were vulnerable, the opportunity to take you was there. And so that became another thing I began to understand
is like even these things that feel
harsh in the minds of our parents,
this was for our protection.
And I don't agree with doing that to your children.
I have to believe that love and compassion and kindness and care, those things are the
things that we offer to our children and that will bring them to a peace, a place of peace
and wholeness.
But at the same time, recognizing that the world that I grew up in, the neighborhood
that I grew up in was fundamentally different from the neighborhood that my children are growing up in.
I understand why, why they made the decisions they made, why they did what they did.
It's interesting, you said it was kind of like therapy.
You had a conversation with a couple of directors, producers, like just to get advice.
You talked to Steven Spielberg, right?
I did, yeah.
And he said something to you
about like putting your life on the page like this in the film. What did he tell you? Yeah,
first shout out to Kate Capshaw, his wife. She's a painter. That's how we met. So she
came to the studio and we were just geeking out about paint. And you know, I had these
canvases there that I had been working on for the film.
And she asked me, she said, so what is all this work about?
This feels a little different from your other paintings.
And so I had a script in my hand, and I handed it to her, signed it, and
said, thanks for coming to the studio.
Appreciate you.
And Kate and I have stayed in touch.
And so she read the script in about 24, 48 hours and got back to me and
said, this is something special. Do you mind if I share it with Stephen? And I said, yeah,
no, of course not. That's insane.
Right? Like what?
What are you nuts? No. I said, of course. And she gave it to Stephen and within a couple
of days, he got back to me and he said,
do you have something very special here?
This is not the kind of film that Hollywood
usually treats well.
You have to protect yourself.
It's going to be difficult
and it is not going to fix everything.
And he had just done his own family story.
With the fabled Ninsyan.
And so he also told me that I cried every day on set.
And for me, I didn't cry every day, but there were many days.
You were on the other side of the project.
To be honest with you, Kate and Steven spoke to me about the project throughout filming.
And so on the other side of the project, I would say,
yeah, it's true. Everything has not been fixed,
but there definitely have been some revelations, like I said, about understanding the motivations of my father. Um, that has changed.
That has definitely changed for me.
I want to talk to you a little bit about
some of the other reasons why you wanted to make this film.
You also made this movie
because while you document black life,
black people by and large are not the ones consuming
or buying your art.
And in the short documentary that you did in 2022,
Shut Up and Paint, you shared your struggle
with the commodification of your art.
You mentioned in there how you have family members
who at least at that point still hadn't seen.
Still.
Still to this day.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Has that ever made you question what you do?
Well, actually let me rephrase that. It hasn't made me question what you do? Well, actually, let me rephrase that.
It hasn't made me question what I do.
It's made me question where what I do goes.
So I don't question painting.
I love that. That's like in my heart.
It's the thing that I one of the things that I know that I was made for.
But the reality is, as I said in that documentary, where I grew up, the place I grew up, does
not look like the place where I am now.
And the people who engage with my work often don't come from that world.
And let me be clear here, I'm not just talking about race.
I'm talking about class as well.
I feel blessed to be able to do what I do every day.
I mean, I make paintings and people pay me to do that.
It's kind of ridiculous.
It's like, let's just be honest.
Let's just put that out there.
It's kind of ridiculous.
So I'm not complaining about that.
But what I want is to figure out how I can get more access for folks.
And you felt like a movie. You felt like visuals. And that way was more democratizing.
Yeah. As I said, I think I said in the film, the documentary, film is a much more democratically
accessible medium. You don't have to be a rich man to go to a movie, you know, and
nobody makes you feel uncomfortable when you walk into a movie theater. You can just walk in a movie, watch a movie or
you know, eventually you'll be able to watch it in your home, you know.
So
that was, that was incredibly important to me because as I went into more spaces, gallery spaces,
I recognize how uncomfortable they are.
This beautiful big white space where you are
the only black face in that building,
there is some fancy person sitting at the front desk,
and you don't know whether, do I need to pay to get in?
It's like, do I need to talk to them?
Do I need to say something? And then you see these paintings on the wall, and you don't know whether, do I need to pay to get in? It's like, do I need to talk to them? Do I need to say something?
And then you see these paintings on the wall
and you're like, these are interesting,
but I don't know anything about them.
That kind of elitism that one feels
when they're in those spaces
doesn't help people connect to the art at all.
I wanna play a clip from Shut Up and Paint
to delve a little bit more into some of the experiences
that you have dealt with as an artist in these spaces.
In this clip that I'm about to play,
you're on the phone with an art dealer
and you're restating what they're asking you to do,
which is essentially to stop being an activist
and talking about injustices and just paint.
Let's listen.
Okay, what you're trying to explain to me
is I'm making paintings about white supremacy
and that institutions that facilitate white
supremacy are saying if you just didn't talk so loud about that and not say the
things that it's actually about not say the things that actually motivate you
to make what you make then like you know we would accept what you do and so I'm
like why the f*** would I do that?
At the end of the day at least I I can say, like, I held my principles,
and they decided based on who I am, not who I pretended to be,
that they weren't interested. I'm okay with that.
That was my guest, Titus Kaffar, in the 2022 documentary,
Shut Up and Paint.
There's an actual scene in this documentary
where you receive notice that one of your paintings sells
for $1.2 million.
And you're like, wow.
But also how much of that are you going to get?
No, I don't get any of that.
You don't get any of it?
I don't get any of that.
No, this is not Europe.
Wait, well, so I don't know. I mean, we hear like your paintings sell for all of these exorbitant amounts of money.
That's secondary market stuff.
That's part of the reason why I allowed that to be in the documentaries, because most people
don't understand that.
Most folks, they see those numbers and they're like, oh man, Titus is doing really well.
And I'm doing all right.
But the reality is that secondary market people take those to auction houses auction houses
auction those paintings off and the person who bought it, that's the person who makes the money from it, you know and
None of that goes back to the artists none of it not a dime. So you might have bought that painting for
You know the painting that was actually in question if I'm not mistaken. I think that was originally purchased for $12,000
which was Not bad for me at the time. But I think something like five years later, it was auctioned off for 1.2.
Let's take a short break.
If you're just joining us, my guest is artist and filmmaker Titus Kaffar.
We're talking about his new movie, Exhibiting Forgiveness. We'll
continue our conversation after a short break. I'm Tonya Mosley, and this is Fresh Air.
Hi, this is Molly Sivinesper, digital producer at Fresh Air.
And this is Terri Gross, host of the show.
One of the things I do is write the weekly newsletter.
And I'm a newsletter fan. I read it every Saturday after breakfast. The newsletter includes all the week's shows, staff recommendations,
and Molly picks timely highlights from the archive. It's a fun read.
It's also the only place where we tell you what's coming up next week, an exclusive.
So subscribe at whyy.org slash fresh air and look for an email from Molly every Saturday morning.
This message comes from WISE, the app for doing things in other currencies.
Send, spend, or receive money internationally and always get the real-time mid-market exchange
rate with no hidden fees.
Download the Wyse app today or visit wyse.com, T's and C's apply.
Support for this podcast and the following message come from Autograph Collection Hotels,
offering over 300 independent hotels around the world, each exactly like nothing else.
Hands selected for their inherent craft, each hotel tells its own unique story through distinctive design and immersive experiences,
from medieval falconry to volcanic wine tasting.
Autograph Collection is part of the Marriott Bonvoy portfolio of over 30 hotel brands
around the world. Find the unforgettable at autographcollection.com. This election season,
you can expect to hear a lot of news, some of it meaningful, much of it not. Give the Up First
podcast 15 minutes, sometimes a little less, and we'll help you sort it out. What's going on around
the world and at home. Three stories, 15 minutes, up first every day. Listen every morning wherever you get
your podcasts.
Wait, wait, don't tell me. Fresh Air, up first, NPR News Now, Planet Money, Ted Radio Hour,
Thru Line, the NPR Politics Podcast, Code Switch, Embedded, Books We Love, Wildcard
are just some of the podcasts you can enjoy sponsor free with NPR
Plus. Get all sorts of perks across more than 20 podcasts with the bundle option. Learn
more at plus.npr.org.
Tanya Mosley This is Fresh Air. I'm Tanya Mosley. And today
I'm talking to Titus Kaffar about his directorial debut, a new movie based on his life, titled Exhibiting Forgiveness.
It's about a painter who is battling with the trauma of his youth, the abandonment of his father,
and the final days of his ailing mother. Titus Kaffar is an acclaimed painter known for his
innovative and thought-provoking works that challenge traditional historical narratives
and representations. Let's talk a little bit about your techniques that might be a way to be able to visualize
for those who are listening to us.
You deconstruct many of your paintings and sculptures using cuts and shreds and stitches
and tars.
And sometimes you paint over a painting.
Other times you might cut out a piece of a painting
as you did with your Time magazine cover in 2020
that depicted a black mother holding a silhouette of a child
and the child is cut out of the image.
You were inspired by the last words of George Floyd
who was calling out to his mother
as he was being arrested and ultimately
died. Can you take us to how you came to that idea of the painting of a mother
essentially holding what feels like a ghost of a child? I was brokenhearted by
the words of George Floyd. I was inspired by the words of my mother and when George Floyd died
I felt like giving up man. I didn't want to talk to people. I was getting phone calls
from folks like you know come do a public talk here and like you know I said I'm not
doing that. I'm not doing that because y y'all want me to be hopeful right now.
I ain't hopeful.
And so I called my mom and I was just talking to her.
And she wasn't doing well.
And my mom was just talking about how she has four sons.
And all of us have had some kind of run-in with police before
that could have ended up exactly the same way.
That was the thing that inspired me to make that painting.
I was thinking about my mother, my mother and her fear of losing her voice. That's the George Floyd's words were horrifying, you know? And
I don't know that that, for me, could have sent me to the studio to make something to turn it to turn
those those words into something constructive that's what that came from
really yeah because um you talk a lot about I think in your TED talk you you
talk about like when we look at a painting, there's so many things within the painting that we can focus on. And this particular
painting, the focus is on the mother. She's centered there. She's beautiful in color and
fullness. And she's holding a silhouette. Her son is gone. Yeah, the piece is called analogous colors, but it's from a series called contours of loss and
I was just thinking about
how the absence of something can imply what was there and
it makes the the absence physical and
That's the thing about absence is we feel it but it is in fact not physical. What do you do with the
pieces that you cut out? Sometimes they get incorporated into other paintings. Sometimes I have a role of figures in my studio, in my storage.
Right now the cutout from the film is actually, if you remember, he cuts that
figure out and he lays that little boy on the chair and now that that chair and the cutout
are in the exhibition in Beverly Hills. I'm so taken by the choices that you
make like that choice and I'm also I'll be honest, like sometimes
uncomfortable and disturbed when you manipulate
or when we see it manipulated.
The actual end result is a beautiful thing that we
can all partake in.
But in particular, like in the film, there's this
gorgeous portrait of three boys in front of a house,
and then your character, played by Andre Holland,
covers the two boys in white paint. So like the moment he picks up that brush and then puts that white stroke,
it's like, ah, like just right. I mean, I know you've heard that before, that it really disturbs people.
Do you remember the first time you made that decision
to do that to a piece of your work?
I do.
I do remember the first time.
It wasn't conscious.
It wasn't me conceptualizing an idea about a conversation
in the context of art history, you know what I mean?
I was in the studio working on this painting and I had spent, I was in graduate school
at the time, I'd spent months working on this piece and it just was not working.
It just was not working.
And there were two characters in the painting and I just like, I actually know that first
one there was only one character in the painting and I just like actually know that first one there was only one character in the painting and I just I was frustrated and
I was like you know I'm just gonna start over and so I had painted it in oil so
in order to paint over it I needed oil primer to go over it and so I got my
primer together and I just started wiping it out and I put that first brush stroke on
there and I stopped for a second and saw that something was there and then I took a rag
and I wiped back the area in front of the eyes and his eyes, the character's eyes kind
of peered through in this kind of ghostly way. And I didn't know what I was doing,
but I just kept going.
And I just more strokes and more strokes and more strokes
and then I'd wipe it back and then pull it out again.
So it was this kind of, this push and this pull,
as we say in painting, and this appearance and disappearance
and trying to find that balance
between presence and absence. And I stopped and I looked at it and I was like, I don't
know, man, I think this works. And so I just sat with it for a few days before I showed
anybody. I had a critique coming up and I wasn't going to show anybody but then I had the critique
so I put in the critique and yeah, they didn't love it. They were confused or they thought what
does it mean? What did you do? What in the world are you doing? Yeah, graduate school was really interesting for me but it taught me to believe in my
own vision you know that moment and moments like those made me realize that
a lot of the a lot of the innovative things a lot of the most innovative
things that I'm going to do are not going to be conscious. I'm going to stumble into them.
That became part of your process, that white.
And so in the film, that particular scene,
there's a story behind it.
Yeah, I mean, I think there's a sort of cheat
for these kinds of paintings, right?
You could just not really put as much time
into painting that character.
Let's say I'm painting a portrait of you, right?
And I decide halfway through,
and this is why I don't make these kinds of decisions,
I'm going to whitewash this painting.
Well, why would I do as much detail on the eyes
if I know I'm just gonna paint over it?
But the truth of the matter is I never know
what I'm gonna do when I start. I'm kind of waiting to hear. And when I hear, I go, okay, I'll go that direction. That's
part of the reason why things keep changing. But in that scene, what happens is the gallerist shows
up unannounced and wants to celebrate because the artist, Terrell, his work has just been chosen,
his exhibition has been chosen as critics pick in the New York Times, which
is ironic because we got critics picked in the New York Times yesterday.
Congratulations. Thank you. And he says to her basically, I don't want to have this conversation right now.
You see when you're in the studio working that's like private time and And he says to her, basically, I don't want to have this conversation right now.
You see, when you're in the studio working, that's like private time.
And that's that kind of introspective, quiet space.
And somebody coming in at the wrong moment can be completely destructive, can take you
off completely.
And also, if the person doesn't know your process then and this
always happens people are so well-meaning they come in and they see
something and they say something like oh my god it's perfect don't take another
stroke and I actually don't ever want to hear that don't come to my studio
talking about that's perfect yes please because I don't want to my studio talking about that's perfect. Please, please.
Because I don't want to spend the time that it takes me
to push your voice out of my head in order to get back into the painting
and do what the painting is telling me to do.
I'm not trying to hear you.
That's what happens in the film.
And so he's not having it.
He's like, I don't even wanna have this conversation
right now. And she he's not having it. He's like, I don't even want to have this conversation right now. And she leaves. And then he wakes up in the middle of the night and comes into
his studio and it hits him what needs to happen, what needs to be done. And that painting is
in the film, but that painting is my painting. And that painting is these three boys, as you said, sitting
on this fence. And I took that photograph when I went back to Michigan. And I was in
my old neighborhood, andaine, Jonathan and Jason and
Home when I left and my three cousins they
They all ended up in prison and
And Jermaine died in prison. Sorry.
So when she comes in talking about,
ah, this is perfect.
This is perfect.
Don't do anything to it.
It's like lady, you have no idea. So that's the
challenge of having a practice where you are trying to understand your place in
the world better by mining your experiences.
It means sort of necessary vulnerability
and you put the work into the world
and at that point you don't have any control
over how it's interpreted.
And if you believe you do, you're wrong
and you should let go of that.
And if you believe you do, you're wrong, and you should let go of that. And so there's a, there's a just, just a gap between the process and the places where these
things are shown or seen.
And that is part of the reason why the film is what the film is.
Let's take a short break.
If you're just joining us, my guest is artist and filmmaker Titus Kaffar.
We're talking about his new movie, exhibiting forgiveness.
We'll continue our conversation after a short break.
This is Fresh Air.
This message comes from the podcast podcast Strict Scrutiny.
Join law experts Melissa Murray, Leah Littman, and Kate Shaw as they break down the biggest
legal headlines and SCOTUS decisions.
New episodes drop every Monday.
Subscribe to Strict Scrutiny wherever you get your podcasts and on YouTube.
This message comes from Pushkin.
In Revenge of the Tipping Point,-selling author Malcolm Gladwell returns to the subject of social
epidemics and tipping points and the dark side of contagious phenomena
available wherever books are sold and wherever you get your audiobooks.
If you love our Fresh Air podcast, you should definitely try NPR+.
With an upgrade to the NPR Plus bundle, you get access and perks
from over 20 of NPR's most popular podcasts and more. And with Fresh Air Plus, you get
sponsor-free listening and exclusive bonus episodes every week. So basically, give a
little and get a lot in return. Visit plus.npr.org. This is Fresh Air, and today I'm talking to Titus Kaffar
about his directorial debut, a new movie based on his life titled Exhibiting Forgiveness.
It's about a painter who is battling with the trauma of his youth, the abandonment of
his father, and the final days of his ailing mother. Titus Kaffar is an acclaimed painter known for his innovative and thought-provoking works
that challenge traditional historical narratives and representations. There
seems to be this delicate balance that is like extreme admiration and almost
like hostility. I don't know the right adjective for it, between the artist and the
buyer because there is actually a scene in the movie where you're at or the character
who portrays a version of you is at a showing, it's at the end of the film and there's this
admiring guy who's bought a bunch of his paintings and says like, it's right over,
it's in my bedroom, you know? And the character that is portraying you is staring at a picture
of his deceased mother, a portrait. And that's what you're talking about here, is like, there
seems to be this gap and this space between those two things.
Yep.
What is the thing that would close that gap?
Because you all both need each other.
I mean, I think that scene is one experience.
It's not all of them. I think the thing that gives me hope is the
positive experiences I have with people who collect my work. I have this
friend, his name is Eric Barkley, he became a friend because he started
collecting my work and my paintings exist in his house. I was giving I did a screening at more house not too long ago and
His son was in the audience Eric's son was in the audience and I
realized that my
painting has been a witness
to his Becoming the man that he is. That feels
like special and those are the kinds of experiences that I love.
We go in the studio and we make the things for the reason that we make them
and as I say we go out into the world. I had an experience with my first exhibition in New York.
It was at Friedman-Bendon Gallery.
And I had made this painting of this woman
and her face was kind of blurred.
It was based on this 1800s portrait,
but her hands, I painted her hands almost hyper real.
You could see the veins inside of her hands.
And I got to the exhibition,
the opening was very much like it was in the film. And there was this woman who was standing in front
of that painting. And I walked by her, didn't say anything, and she was there staring intently,
went around, took my pictures, did all this stuff. And then at the end of the exhibition,
she was still in front of that painting.
I walked up to her and I was like,
you've been in front of this piece for a long time,
do you like this painting?
And she didn't turn to me, she was still staring at the painting, and she said, you know, my mother died recently,
and I feel like I'm losing her face in my memory, but I can't forget her
hand. She was a laborer and like her hands were so strong. And I feel like this painting
is about my mother. And I mean, do you think for one moment I care what I was thinking
when I was in the studio making that? Doesn't matter, like, we connected on a human moment.
I made something that, like, felt like it expressed
your experience, your lived experience in the world.
That's a gift.
Let's take a short break. If you're just joining us,
my guest is artist and filmmaker Titus Kaffar.
We're talking about his new movie, Exhibiting Forgiveness. We'll
continue our conversation after a short break. This is Fresh Air.
This message comes from critics at large. Join the New Yorkers writers as they dissect
the latest in pop culture, television, film, and more. From the romanticization of Las
Vegas to the obsession of tarot cards, tune in every Thursday to deepen your knowledge.
This message comes from the Open Book with Jenna podcast. Join the Today Show's Jenna
Bush Hager for inspiring conversations with celebrities, experts, and authors. Hear from
guests like Stephen Colbert, Nicholas Sparks, and more. Search Open Book with Jenna to follow
now.
Hey there, it's Tamara Keith. I cover the White House. I know this is hard to believe,
but one day the election will be over. Then the winner gets a lot more powerful. It's
my job to report on what they do with that power. That's public accountability, but
it's not possible without public support. So please support our work. Sign up for NPR
Plus. Go to plus.npr.org.
This is Fresh Air, and today I'm talking to Titus Kaffar
about his directorial debut,
a new movie based on his life titled,
Exhibiting Forgiveness.
It's about a painter who is battling
with the trauma of his youth,
the abandonment of his father,
and the final days of his ailing mother. Titus
Kaffar is an acclaimed painter known for his innovative and thought-provoking
works that challenge traditional historical narratives and representations.
Your father was in your life in the early years of your life before he got
deeper into drugs and other things. He was incredibly hard on you.
I mean, my father was not nearly as hard on me
as his father was on him.
And I know that sounds like I'm obfuscating just a little bit,
but I'm trying to contextualize.
And as I said at the beginning, I now recognize that my father is not a villain.
And I've spent so much time, as I said, as a young man, making him that in my head.
But there was also, so there's a really powerful scene in the movie where you guys are working
really hard.
You'd work alongside your dad.
He would salvage things, mow lawns, like you guys were doing a lot of labor. And he is riding you
faster, harder, go, go, go. There's a point where you're in pain. Folks will see the movie to
understand more, but you're physically in pain and he's riding you even even through that. And that became a voice in your head for a big part of your life.
Still a voice in my head. And that voice says what? Boy, we ain't got time for this. You
need to get to work. Stop playing, get to work. Push. Ain't nobody gonna help you that voice is like
That's what I'm saying. It's like yeah, my father pushed me hard. I
Don't know that I would be here if he didn't hmm. I
Could not say that out loud before I started working on this project
We lived on the north side and a lot of folks on the North Side didn't have your traditional trash pick up. In our neighborhood, we had burning barrels and everybody would throw their trash in the
burning barrels and burn all of it.
In retrospect, it just shocks me that that was even legal.
But everybody did it and our job was to go pick up these burning barrels.
We take the burning barrels,
throw them in the back of the truck,
and we'd go to the dump, and we would do it again.
And that's how we made money.
Or we would drywall somebody's house,
or shingle the roof.
So from the age of like eight, nine, 10, I was with him.
That's what we were doing.
And I wasn't playing.
I wasn't allowed to play.
That was work.
It was work. I wish I would pretend playing. I wasn't allowed to play. That was work. It was work.
I wish I would pretend like I didn't know how to shovel.
I wish I would be like, oh, I'm too tired for this.
That wasn't allowed.
That wasn't allowed.
That wasn't allowed.
And my cousin, my cousin Jonathan, he said it this way.
And I don't know where he got this from but he said, you know, you threw hurdles in front of me and I jumped over them, but
I'm not giving you credit for my strong legs.
And it's kind of like that.
I do recognize that I have strong legs,
and I do recognize that I got those strong legs
from jumping over those hurdles.
And I do recognize that I probably wouldn't be here
without that.
And now, as I have a greater context
for my father's experience,
for all the trauma that he went through,
and the thing that he was
trying to escape. You know, I want to be clear this is not a documentary. Like I
said, I did that. If I couldn't tell it everything, it would be a very different,
it would be a very different story if I told everything. There's this line in the
film, and I think I've heard you talk about it, where you say,
you know, there's a moment of almost like reconciliation and forgiveness with your father,
saying, we're now in the present, I forgive you for the past, but that doesn't necessarily
mean that you're going to be a part of my future.
With this new lens, this new view that you have,
understanding the context of his life, does that change that for you? What's your relationship
like now? I mean, for certain, I mean, I think, well, two things. One, I think that there is a,
we use forgiveness and reconciliation as though they are synonyms. That's true.
forgiveness and reconciliation as though they are synonyms. That's true.
They're not synonyms.
You may find yourself in a situation where you need to forgive somebody who is no longer alive.
And in that case, how can there be a reconciliation?
You can't do that.
And so I say that because I think it's important that we recognize that forgiveness
Most of the time has more to do with us than it does to do with them
And so for me the kind of forgiveness that this film is talking about is the kind of forgiveness that allows you to unburden yourself
And so, you know, I'm not carrying this anymore. It's too heavy. I'm done with it. You had a debt
You owe me something. You don't owe me no more
I'm good. I'm gonna let that go and
In saying that there is freedom
There's a weight lifted off of your shoulders
The part that I think we get wrong
Is I think we assume that that means that you have to continue on the path with that individual.
I don't think it's a good idea for us to be telling people to forgive and reconcile,
different word, when it means that they are putting themselves back in harm's way.
I watch a lot of people, and my family, my mother in particular,
forgive people again and again and again,
and they harmed her again and again and again.
I'm not telling people to do that.
I'm not, I'm not.
Including yourself with your father.
No, it's not a requirement.
My father is deep on his journey now, and I am very hopeful that he will make it to
his destination, and I will be there to celebrate with him, and we are in contact.
But I also recognize that I needed some space from that. And so, Christian A. Smith says, forgiveness requires the renegotiation
of boundaries. And I don't think we think about it like that. If you grew up in the
church like I grew up in the church, you know, how many times you forgive? Seven times seventy,
right? You smack me, I turn the other cheek. Hit me again. What?
I understand that conceptually, but I think that can do damage to the psyche.
Titus Kaffar, thank you so much.
Thank you.
We spoke with painter Titus Kaffar about his directorial debut, a new movie based on his
life titled Exhibiting Forgiveness.
If you'd like to catch up on interviews you've missed, like our conversation with Bridget
Everett, star of the HBO series Somebody Somewhere, on being an introvert in life and an extrovert
in cabaret shows, or Nick Harkaway, son of famed author John Le Carre on his new novel
Carla's Choice, check out our podcast.
You'll find lots of Fresh Air interviews.
And to find out what's happening behind the scenes of our show and get our producers'
recommendations for what to watch, read, and listen to, subscribe to our free newsletter
at whyy.org slash Fresh Air.
With Terry Gross, I'm Tonya Mosley.
This message comes from Grammarly.
Back and forth communication at work is costly.
That's why over 70,000 teams and 30 million people use Grammarly's AI to make their points
clear the first time.
Better writing, better results.
Learn more at Grammarly.com slash enterprise. Coming up on the indicator for Planet Money is Love Week,
our week-long series exploring the business and economics of romance.
Ever wonder how cable channels crank out so many rom-coms around Christmas time?
Or wish you could get relationship advice from an economist?
I'm listening! That's Love Week from the indicator.
Listen on your podcast app or smart speaker.