Su Rynard
Bear (2004) video installation
October 13 - November 11, 2006
a video installation by Su Rynard
        16mm film / video, 9 minute loop, colour, 2004, stereo sound
BEAR consists of a rear screen video projection within a wildlife 
        diorama. The diorama case, constructed from the classic materials of 
        museum display -- mahogany & glass, (38" long, 24" high and
        20" deep) 
        is the sculptural component of the installation. Inside the diorama 
        is a model landscape where trees, moss and pinecones combine with the 
        various flotsam and jetsam of modern life -- coffee cups, tissues, 
        and rusted metal. The painted scenic backdrop normally found in 
        classic museum dioramas is replaced by a rear screen video 
        projection. A black bear 'wildlife film' plays continuously on this 
        screen. 
The video was shot over a two-year period in rural Ontario. Black 
        bears were documented foraging for food in their 'natural habitat' - 
        the township garbage dump. Set in the midst of a parade of SUVs and 
        minivans -- a word-less narrative unfolds with both people and 
        animals as the characters. While sometimes humorous, a tenuous and 
        disturbing ecological relationship is portrayed.
Apropos to the twenty-first century, where our experience of the 
        natural world is often technologically or socially mediated, BEAR 
        explores how natural history dioramas construct a view of nature, and 
        how this speaks to our cultural relationship with the natural world.
* * *
Su Rynard works across a range of approaches: dramatic, experimental, 
        documentary and installation. BEAR (2004) is the second piece in a 
        trilogy of video installations. The award winning BUG GIRL was 
        completed in 2003 and APPLES (REQIUM) is in development. These three 
        works are related in their exploration of "nature". Rynard's short video SIGNAL (3 min. 1993) marked the beginning of a trajectory where she began to look to science as a departure point for artistic 
        inquiry. Her most recent film KARDIA (85 min. 2005) - an exploration 
        of the heart as soul and psyche, completes this cycle. KARDIA is the 
        recipient of the prestigious (USA) Alfred P. Sloan Prize.

