In Simon Morley’s essay Staring into the Contemporary Abyss he discusses how contemporary artists have approached the the sublime.
He explains that the eighteenth century Romantic painters sought to depict ‘extreme aspects of nature – mountains, oceans, deserts’ whereas the Abstract Espressionists looked to create art that possessed a ‘depth and profundity European art failed to provide’. It was not until the 1970s that the concept of the Sublime was reestablished.
The ‘staged landscapes’ of Dafna Talmor consist of cut and montaged strips of negatives featuring landscape scenes. In particular, her series Constructed Landscapes II feature shifting perspectives that serve to disorientate the viewer; the ground appearing to slide back and forth and slope first one way then another. To use Morley’s terms, there is no ‘comforting sense of place’ for the viewer in this destabilising landscape.

Talmor’s work often features visible negative space, gaps of white and strips of black like rents in the landscape providing glimpses into a void beyond. Morley talks of ‘a sense of void – of being on a borderline or edge where we can no longer codify experience …… serving to mediate between being and nothingness’. In Talmor’s images the viewer is still in the zone of being but is threatened by the nothingness beyond.

The tears remind me of the crack in space and time in the TV show Doctor Who that wipes out events and leaks time energy that can eradicate people’s very existence.
This window to the beyond, which could be non-existence, something transcendental or something otherworldly, this non-space gives the sense of danger that Morley refers to: quoting Edmund Burke he talks of the ‘heightened and perversely exalted feeling we often get from being threatened by something beyond our control or understanding’; and also Joseph Addison’s description of the sublime as something that ‘fills the mind with and agreeable kind of horror.’
http://www.dafnatalmor.co.uk/constructed-landscapes-ii.html

