![Photograph taken at night documenting an installation by artist Caroline Coolidge outside the CCVA at Harvard University. The darkened entrance to the building, framed by two large columns, has a large projection that unevenly follows the contours of the building and shows a white mask and what looks like tree branches but is hard to make out.](art/part-two/Caroline-Coolidge-Part-Two-01.jpg)
Part Two, 2020
Multi-channel video projection
Installation view (1 of 3)
![Photograph taken at night documenting an installation by artist Caroline Coolidge outside the CCVA at Harvard University. A metal fence that appears to be blue, fills the bottom third of the photograph which is largely occupied by a projection of a white mask of a face decomposing. The image is abstract and hard to decipher.](art/part-two/Caroline-Coolidge-Part-Two-02.jpg)
Part Two, 2020
Multi-channel video projection
Installation view (2 of 3)
![Photograph taken at night documenting an installation by artist Caroline Coolidge outside the CCVA at Harvard University showing a section of the building, with a large column on the right and a bright projection in the center corner of the building.](art/part-two/Caroline-Coolidge-Part-Two-03.jpg)
Part Two, 2020
Multi-channel video projection
Installation view (3 of 3)
Part Two, a site-specific installation presented at the Carpenter Center for Visual Arts, in the autumn of 2020, is a meditation on the nonphysical traversing of space. In its simplest terms, the work is a reflection on how we experienced space during the global pandemic when schools and many institutional buildings were closed. It is also a deeper exploration of movement, barriers, loss, and the invisible crossing of borders, both literal and ephemeral.