Washington City Paper Art Review of Soomin Ham's "RECOLLECTIONS" by Louis Jacobson

Soomin Ham’s “Song of the Butterfly”

Bratty and Soomin Ham’s Photos: City Lights for Feb. 29–March 7

In her photography, Soomin Ham returns often to deeply personal imagery. In Recollections, her most recent solo exhibition at Multiple Exposures Gallery, Ham does so again, including repurposing works from a previous exhibit, Sound of Butterfly, in which she photographed her late mother’s possessions using stunningly creative techniques such as encasing the images in ice or leaving them out to be covered by falling snow. Recollections doesn’t have the same intense focus on grief; it’s more about her journey through “fragments and layers that shape a landscape of dreams, losses, and memories.” A major recurring theme in her current show is the contrast between light and dark; “Lights for the Fallen” pairs a washed-out portrayal of tombstones with an inky sky filled with twinkling stars, while the vertical diptych “East” and “West” twins portrayals of upside-down and right-side-up branches. Ham includes five images from her “Windows” series, notably a soft-toned stack of clouds hovering over a thin strip of land and a peaceful, pictorialist depiction of a family of ducks on the surface of a lake. Ham’s most enigmatic image may be “Once Upon a Time,” in which a series of footprint-like impressions recedes into the distance in the sand—or are they actually ascending into the sky? With Ham at her moodiest, it’s hard to be sure. Recollections runs through March 10 at Multiple Exposures Gallery at the Torpedo Factory Art Center, 105 N. Union St., Alexandria. Daily, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. multipleexposuresgallery.com. Free. —Louis Jacobson