INSTALLATION VIEW, HOW SOON IS NOW, VANCOUVER ART GALLERY, 2009  In 2005, Lucy Pullen hired a pilot to take her up in a Cessna over Vancouver Island, and then captured the event through the lens of a camera. With an impromptu flight plan, the pilot
       
     
 FLOOR PLAN, HOW SOON IS NOW, VANCOUVER ART GALLERY, 2009
       
     
LP_Tricks(2005).jpg
       
     
LP_Tricks(2005)2.jpg
       
     
 INSTALLATION VIEW, HOW SOON IS NOW, VANCOUVER ART GALLERY, 2009  In 2005, Lucy Pullen hired a pilot to take her up in a Cessna over Vancouver Island, and then captured the event through the lens of a camera. With an impromptu flight plan, the pilot
       
     

INSTALLATION VIEW, HOW SOON IS NOW, VANCOUVER ART GALLERY, 2009

In 2005, Lucy Pullen hired a pilot to take her up in a Cessna over Vancouver Island, and then captured the event through the lens of a camera. With an impromptu flight plan, the pilot preforms snap rolls by cutting the engine at 5000 feet. an alarm sounds as the plane falls freely. Pullen splits the view between the pilot’s actions and the spectacular landscape outside the airplane’s window. As the plane takes a nose dive, the sensation of zero gravity is produced, demonstrated by an object that hovers for a moment in mid-air above the pilot’s hand. Irreverent and daring, the video stands as a document of a unique event and an unconventional representation of the West Coast landscape.

Kathleen Ritter, Curator, Vancouver Art Gallery

Vancouver Canada

2009

 FLOOR PLAN, HOW SOON IS NOW, VANCOUVER ART GALLERY, 2009
       
     

FLOOR PLAN, HOW SOON IS NOW, VANCOUVER ART GALLERY, 2009

LP_Tricks(2005).jpg
       
     
LP_Tricks(2005)2.jpg