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Rebecca
Carter
Beacon
LOS ANGELES,
October 2002 – Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions presented
"Beacon" by Rebecca Carter, a two-channel video installation
that ran 16 November, 2002 through 18 January 2003. "Beacon"
was the artist’s first solo show in Los Angeles since receiving
her masters in fine arts from Art Center College of Design in 2000.
An opening reception took place on16 November 2002 from 6 - 8 pm.
The artist spoke about her work on 6 December at 7 pm. This exhibition
was organized by Irene Tsatsos.
"Beacon"
centered on the relationship between physical and visual perception.
Carter noted that during a sudden change in speed, the change is
often first registered visually, followed by the body realigning
itself in time and space to accommodate the shift, much like adjusting
a level. However, sometimes it is the body, instead of the eyes,
that senses an acceleration or deceleration. It is the space between
these two phenomena, the moment of destabilization where neither
perceptual system dominates, which Carter’s scenario sought
to evoke.
The work
was installed as two facing projections. Placed close together,
the projections formed a narrow video corridor. The viewer was,
in effect, sandwiched between two planes of light and sound.
The image
for "Beacon" used a single shot of video, taken aboard
a plane from the pilot’s perspective, as the plane heads toward
a runway for landing. To maximize the potential for spatial dislocation,
the video was shot at dusk, which Carter views as "the most
ambiguous time of day." The shot consists of a darkening field
interrupted by white landing lights and sequential flashers at the
edge of the runway, which serve as beacons for the landing.
In each
projection, just before the plane appears to touch down, the video
reversed itself and the plane appears to ascend. The speed of the
footage is altered differently in each of the looped projections.
In one projection, as the plane appeared to descend, the speed of
the video was slowed, lengthening greatly the time it would take
the plane to near the earth under normal perceptual conditions.
Then, as the plane appeared to ascend, the extreme deceleration
was reversed, generating a sense of centrifugal force, as if the
plane was tethered to the point it kept trying to approach. In the
second projection, the same sequence of video was presented with
the plane appearing to accelerate as it landed and decelerate as
it ascended.
The juxtaposition
of these projections dramatized the delicate balance between what
is seen and what is felt. By continually shifting the viewer’s
real-time expectations of the scenario, Carter aimed to create conditions
where at certain moments the physical sensation of hurdling through
space became primary, while at other moments the visually observed
cues superceded the physical ones, and still at other moments both
perceptions competed simultaneously until the viewer negotiated
the disparities and re-orientated his or her position between the
two projections.
While "Beacon"
was overtly structured as a contradiction of physical perception
and visual perception, Carter’s deft melding and inversion
of these expectations prompted the realization that these perceptual
systems exist in continuum rather than in opposition.
"Beacon"
was produced while Carter was in residence at the Wexner Center
for the Arts at Ohio State University in Columbus.
Admission
to Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions is free with a recommended
donation of $3.00 ($2.00 students, members free). Gallery hours
are Wednesday – Sunday 12 - 6 pm, Friday 12 – 9 pm.
Call 323.957.1777 for parking information, directions, and additional
information.

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