Leaving Earth, Mary Lucier’s immersive video installation at Cristin Tierney, tests the limits of attention with its Whitmanesque expanse. Nine screens, set on individual poles around the room, like a grove of monitors, feature unsynchronized video loops, some with sounds. A chain saw, the theme from the 1955 film Picnic, and saxophone compositions by her longtime collaborator Earl Howard all add to the din— Lucier harks back to her early work with Fluxus artists and the influence of John Cage. Footage of nesting swallows runs alongside that of fires at Ground Zero and decaying houses. From the highest screen, Lucier herself casts an inscrutable eye on the proceedings, like one of Peter Campus’s enlarged projections of heads, but here set within a shifting collage of friends and artistic collaborators, a family album or home movie. Lucier also confronts death: the person “leaving” is her husband, the painter and critic Robert Berlind, who died in 2015, and while the images center less on Berlind than on their shared world, Lucier maintains a focus on him with threads of text from the journal he kept in his last months. These words scroll by on different screens, deliberately paced for emphasis, conveying the rhythm of speech, suggesting haiku and seeming to reflect on the installation itself: “my mind / now that of a child / for whom / time does not yet exist.”
Lucier casts an unsentimental eye on the seductions of video: on entering the gallery, visitors encounter a sculptural assemblage featuring a scrap of steel with holes that suggest a face, transforming a burnt-out vidicon tube into a death’s head. Harking back to Lucier’s early work in welded metal, it also alludes to her “burns,” videos from the 1970s filmed directly into the sun that left indelible scars on her camera’s “eye.” In a 1991 essay, “Light and Death,” Lucier reflected on light’s destructive capacity, linking it to her video work made in Monet’s gardens, Ohio to Giverny: Memory of Light (1983), and in particular to Monet’s own struggle with deteriorating vision. Lucier has consistently addressed the darkness inherent in our pursuit of natural beauty. Committed to technology and conceptual issues, she’s also maintained the dialogue with painting, extending it in videos related to Berlind’s work from direct perception. In Summer, or Grief (1998), she employed an approach similar to Leaving Earth, combining words of a poem by Allen Grossman with close-up images of Berlind painting outdoors in the landscape of their Sullivan County property.