The Plains of Sweet Regret. A five channel video installation that during its eighteen minutes takes the viewer through the vast expanses of the landscape, into the towns and farmsteads both occupied and abandoned, and offers a perspective on the lives of the resilient people who continue to live there.
The Plains of Sweet Regret
Mary Lucier was invited by the North Dakota Museum of Art to participate in the
series of projects commissioned by the museum to address the subject of the emptying
out of the northern plains. The resulting work, The Plains of Sweet Regret, is a
five channel video installation that during its eighteen minutes takes the viewer
through the vast expanses of the landscape, into the towns and farmsteads both
occupied and abandoned, and offers a perspective on the lives of the resilient
people who continue to live there.
The work begins with texts - phrases provided by residents, such as "lots of space,
few people, tough climate, big farms, small towns, good hearts," and "the land
represents both substance and idea, the center and the circumference." The screens
fill with images of empty roads that mark the corrugated topography of the land as
it rises and falls like the swells of the ocean and extend to a distant horizon.
“You can see weather and the neighbors coming for miles."
Accompanied by a resonant electronic soundtrack composed by her long-time
collaborator Earl Howard, the work establishes a melancholy yet unsentimental tone
as Lucier’s camera brings us to the intimate ruins of uninhabited places. She
records the birth of a calf as counterpoint to the wind blowing through empty barns;
actors readying themselves backstage against her examination of inscrutable relics
left behind by people long departed. The natural gas well viewed through a fiery
haze and the massive grain elevators suggest the mechanization and scale of
corporate agribusiness; an encounter between a man on horseback and a rancher in a
pickup truck epitomizes both the actuality and the mythic representations of rural
life.
The Plains of Sweet Regret approaches its conclusion with a rodeo sequence in which
a rider becomes dangerously entangled with a bull. It is seen in slow motion and for
the rest of the rodeo sequence Lucier overlays the footage with the same image in
reverse, creating a mirror view in which the movement emerges and disappears from a
central slice. While distinct enough to perceive the events, the layered image is
transformed into a semi-abstraction of rodeo and suggests associations with other
ritualistic performances. The rodeo is paired with a plaintive country western song,
George Strait’s I Can Still Make Cheyenne, that Lucier also layers over itself to
achieve a density similar to the rodeo images. The song’s poignant narrative about
an itinerant rodeo man and the woman he leaves behind ends as the video fades on a
handsome young cowboy who with a pump of his fist affirms his satisfaction with his
performance in the arena.
The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue with a preface by Laurel Reuter,
director of the North Dakota Museum of Art and an essay by art historian and critic
Karen Wilkin. Mary Lucier received grants from Creative Capital and the Rockefeller
Foundation in support of The Plains of Sweet Regret. The North Dakota Museum of Art
received funding from the National Endowment for the Arts. The Nathan Cummings
Foundation and Archer Daniels Midland provided support for the catalogue.
The Plains of Sweet Regret has been exhibited at the North Dakota Museum of Art in
Grand Forks, the University of Wyoming Art Museum and the University of Michigan
Museum of Art. This is Mary Lucier’s first large-scale installation exhibited in New
York since 2001, when an important early work was included in Into the Light: The
Projected Image in American Art 1964-1977 at the Whitney Museum of American Art,
curated by Chrissie Isles. Another seminal piece, Untitled Display System, was
recently acquired by the Museum Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia in Madrid, and
is currently on view there in First Generation: Art and the Moving Image, 1963-1986,
curated by Berta Sichel. Mary Lucier is presently working on a multiple-channel
high-definition video series in conjunction with Rainbow Media and the Milwaukee Art
Museum. She will receive the 2007 Skowhegan Medal for Video at the Skowhegan Awards
dinner on April 24.
Lennon Weinberg Gallery
514 West 25 Street - New York