A Christmas(tree) Story
Andy Mann's video Christmas tree is resurrected at Discovery Green
When the Discovery Green Conservancy decided to revive videographer Andy Mann's Video Tree, which was displayed every Christmas for a decade at Tranquility Park, they figured Mann would have wanted to employ the very latest in video technology.
So when a group of artists including Maurice Roberts and Ted Viens, who helped install the original, and Isaac Cohen, who's known for his wooden art cars and fashioned the cabinetry for the project, came together to build the new tree, they planned to use plasma or LCD TVs. As luck would have it, however, modern technology simply couldn't stand up to the demands of the installation.
Those familiar with Mann, who died in 2001 of pancreatic cancer and did most of his pioneering work in Houston, know his work relies on mirrored and flipped images broadcast on stacked, rotated monitors (another, typical installation is at the Art Car Museum).
But plasmas cannot be turned on their sides, and LCDs have much too narrow of a temperature tolerance to survive outdoors in Houston. And so it was that the makers reverted to old-school CRT monitors (or Cathode Ray Tubes — how '80s does that sound?) to assemble the tree.
Thus the revival is nearly identical to the original. The Aurora Picture Show maintained an archive of Mann's prolific work, so the video you see is his. The tree, too, is nearly the same, although it has grown several feet in its second incarnation with the inclusion of slightly larger 27-inch monitors.
The tree, on the edge of Kinder Lake, will remain until the ice rink is taken down. And it will be back up every year for as long as it survives. Next year the makers hope to include video submitted by Houstonians, to be selected by the Aurora Picture Show's curators.