AMSTERDAM.- Reflex Gallery in Amsterdam is presenting Bright Black World, a new exhibition by celebrated American photographer Todd Hido. This profoundly beautiful and arresting collection of images many of them unseen are the results of Hidos exploration of the northern hemisphere in the impenetrable depths of winter. The realities of climate change lurk behind in these images the threat of an eternal darkness looming large. The exhibition runs from 15 September to 17 November 2018.
A special book of images, also titled Bright Black World, published by Nazraeli Press, will be presented at Unseen Photo Fair, 21-23 September 2018. A limited edition of two prints, and a copy of the book will be available at Reflex. Todd Hido will be signing copies of his book during the opening in the gallery on Saturday 15 September (5-7 pm) and at Unseen Amsterdam on Saturday 22 September (4 pm).
In a crepuscular forest scene, it is uncertain whether the faint blush of sun behind the strident firs is setting or rising. Dawn and sunset are one and the same in midwinter the light bleeding through the clouds for a mere hour or so and then fading. Above the leaden horizon of the Norwegian Sea, grey clouds billow and spiral into mysterious forms. In another image of land and sky, the heavy snow clouds bear down like a safety blanket.
A series of epic snowy vistas, devoid of human presence, are magisterial in their desolate beauty. Burrs of snowflakes cling to the camera lens. Two starkly beautiful portraits of women remind us that this terrain is nevertheless home to some. In other scenes, streetlights, motel signs and a cemetery remind us of the life cycle of a community for whom the hardship of winter is rewarded by the endless light of summer.
After Intimate Distance, Hidos 2016 mid-career survey which explored his childhood in the United States, he felt ready to explore new horizons: Having closed that chapter I was very open to shooting in different places. I followed the snow. There I began anew and was able to make a larger reflection about the times that we live in which clearly needs to be done on a global scale."
Not just a political statement, Bright Black World is infused with Nordic mythology, Ragnarok, and the idea of Fimbulwinter a winter that never ends. These images fill the viewer with unease while simultaneously a profound sense of wonder. A vision, as Hido says, that "pushes the envelope of darkness". While he hopes these photographs will lead to some greater insight into the changing world that we live in, while providing the motivation and a moment to reflect on how we got here, he invites us to come to our own conclusions. "As an artist, my job is not to create meaning but to charge the air so that meaning can occur."
Todd Hido (1968) is a San Francisco based artist whose work has been featured in Artforum, The New York Times Magazine, TIME, Vanity Fair and WIRED. His powerful cinematic images of American landscapes and desolate suburbia have a rich cultural impact. The autonomous work of the photographer is in the permanent collections of numerous museums such as the Guggenheim Museum in New York, Los Angeles County Museum of Art and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Todd Hido has over a dozen published books.