For three nights (October 10-12), excerpts from written testimonies, responses, and poems by people directly affected by gun violence in America were projected onto three buildings surrounding The Rink at Rockefeller Center in Jenny Holzer’s latest work VIGIL.
VIGIL comes as no surprise: text-based messages of blisteringly honest observations of society are a hallmark of Holzer’s work. But I’ve only ever read about or seen photographic documentation of her site-specific projections, which have taken place just about everywhere, including New York City while I was living here: in 2015, 2008, 2005, and 2004.
I was pleased to finally catch her work in person on Saturday night, the final evening of its run at Rockefeller Center, but I wasn’t prepared for its intense effect on me. In an image-saturated world, one can hardly expect language to compete so dramatically at provocation and poignancy. But Holzer’s large-scale text is alluring and the selected stories tragic. Despite the distance implied by the format of their display, the delivery felt intimate. Everything seemed to fall into silence while one story after another spoke truth to power, surrendering honest, heartrending reflections on heinous dealings with gun violence.
The work is a reminder that words can be moving and testimonies are always powerful. Public space should always have the possibility to transform an ordinary evening into an extraordinary one. And we should encourage more interventions like these, which are painful but necessary reminders that there are persistent, unresolved sociopolitical issues that require action on our part, even if it’s only paying attention.