Tim Hyde Confronts Darkness in Night Walks by LOUIS JACOBSON FEBRUARY 28TH, 2022
The local photographer tests the limits of how we perceive light and dark in his latest solo show, on display at Alexandria’s Multiple Exposures Gallery.
#5 in Night Walks by Tim Hyde
Night Walks at Multiple Exposures Gallery
In his fourth solo exhibition at Alexandria’s Multiple Exposures Gallery, D.C. and Richmond-based photographer Tim Hyde returns to one of his comfort zones: darkness. Hyde isn’t the only artist who has embraced the limitations of nighttime photography—Gregory Crewdson, Todd Hido, and Frank Hallam Day have also thrived in the gloom of night—but Hyde’s most recent series is notable for testing the limits of human perception. There’s simply no way to experience his low-contrast images other than seeing them in person, with your nose pressed right up to the glass. Consider “#5” in Hyde’s series. In person, you can make out a bright slit of orange light that leaks from under a door and slices through a quiet porch. Yet the gash barely shows up in the online version of the photograph, and can’t be seen at all in the printed handout at the gallery. Hyde’s images revel in their stillness, punctuated by the rare rectangle of light from a window, or occasional small figures slinking around, half unseen. Hyde’s final photograph, “#20,” takes the mood to its logical conclusion, offering an image with a figure and a tree that is almost uniformly black. Darkness, Hyde writes, “makes us aware of our limitations, of our relative place in the universe.” Night Walks is on display through March 19 at Multiple Exposures Gallery at the Torpedo Factory Art Center, 105 N. Union St. Alexandria. multipleexposuresgallery.com. Free.
