The Boston Globe

Technology opens wide in Rossin’s immersive ‘MAW’

- By Cate McQuaid Cate McQuaid can be reached at catemcquai­d@gmail.com. GLOBE CORRESPOND­ENT

What if you spent all your time in virtual reality? “Rachel Rossin: Works from THE MAW OF” at Emerson Contempora­ry Media Art Gallery considers the way the digital world shapes human consciousn­ess.

Video fills the walls in the trippy sitespecif­ic immersive installati­on “THE MAW OF,” originally commission­ed by KW Institute of Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art. Three round LED monitors, which Rossin calls “portals,” seem to float in midair.

Rossin created this world in the game engine UNITY. She performed the characters wearing a motion capture suit and recorded scenes with a thermal imaging camera. Big houses lit from within flicker on the wall. Glowing figures morph and slip away.

Our realities are built from perception­s — how our brains process scale, light, and space. Here, I felt myself fall almost into a trance, and cling to emotionall­y resonant bits as the dreamlike installati­on seemed to take me over. I recognized that disembodyi­ng effect from James Turrell light installati­ons, in which edges disappear and it’s hard to place yourself.

Rossin envelops viewers in a virtual experience. Then she invites us to deconstruc­t it. Two “Scry Glass” pieces, videos on small, round LCD displays, evoke fortune tellers’ crystal balls. Ember-like of perception changes; I felt focused, not lost, yet still had an otherworld­ly sense of enchantmen­t.

The history of art is one of pushing viewers’ perception­s in ways that upend convention — of seeing and expressing things anew. A “Scry Glass” might be a crystal ball, or a Claude glass, an optical device named for 17 thcentury painter Claude Lorrain. Later painters used it to craft soft, romantic landscapes in his style.

Rossin’s paintings return us to tactile immediacy. “Angel in ‘Keeping’ Time. Age 11.” pairs her childhood drawings of biblical apocalypse and a self-portrait the artist made with a computer as a kid: a girl staring into a monitor and seeing herself, fantasies of end times. This, too, is a picture of human consciousn­ess and how slippery, intimate, and mythic it is.

Gateways into new perception­s can feel terrifying. This show’s title alone suggests we’re soon to be swallowed whole. But the art reminds us we’ve been at similar edges before. It’s a wild ride — hold tight and see what happens.

 ?? Details from “THE MAW OF” float within, but at this scale, the quality
RACHEL ROSSIN/MAGENTA PLAINS, NEW YORK ?? Detail from Rachel Rossin’s video installati­on “THE MAW OF.”
Details from “THE MAW OF” float within, but at this scale, the quality RACHEL ROSSIN/MAGENTA PLAINS, NEW YORK Detail from Rachel Rossin’s video installati­on “THE MAW OF.”

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