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Saturday, November 22, 2025 |
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| Todd Hido merges fiction and memory in atmospheric new exhibition at Reflex Amsterdam |
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Todd Hido, 11375-0033, Unpublished, 2014. 35 mm format.
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AMSTERDAM.- Reflex Amsterdam is presenting An Island in the River of Time, a new exhibition by Todd Hido, one of the most distinctive voices in contemporary photography. Known for his atmospheric nocturnal scenes and psychologically charged portraits, Hido now turns toward the expanded visual form of collages, to explore the shifting terrain between memory, place, and narrative.
An Island in the River of Time, evokes a momentary stillness within the continuous flow of experience, a pause in which fragments of past and present drift together and drift within the river. In these new works, Hido brings his own photographs into dialogue with vernacular and found imagery, constructing layered compositions that feel at once both intimate and anonymous, real and imagined.
I love the process of laying out the sequence and juxtaposition of images. Sometimes I think half my photographic practice is just shuffling images around. Editing and sequencing images is one of my favorite things to do. It is like a puzzle with no correct answer, only different ones.
This instinct for assembling meaning through juxtaposition long present in Hidos practice finds new expression here. The collages dissolve the linear structure of time, allowing multiple moments to coexist within a single frame. Hido likens this process to the way memory itself operates: layered, simultaneous, non-linear, and often beautifully imprecise. Like islands in a moving current, these images resist chronology, instead floating freely within an emotional and psychological landscape, creating new narratives.
Hidos works have always lived between documentation and invention, paper movies, as he calls them. Shooting with people is different, he notes, thats more of a narrative collaboration as they help create their own characters and stories. But when you place a documentary image of a house next to a constructed portrait, suddenly both images start telling a story neither could tell alone. Its the combination that does the real work of building an inner world. An Island in the River of Time extends this idea, merging disparate temporalities and photographic truths until fiction and memory are indistinguishable.
We gather old photographs with no intent, but there are so many good ones that deserve to see the light of day again. We may not ever know the names of the people in the photographs or the stories behind them, but we can help them live on a little longer in our cultural memory. And isnt that the goal of most vernacular photography?
In this new body of work, Hido transforms photographys documentary impulse into something more fluid, a meditation on times passage and the persistence of images that refuse to fade. His collages do not capture a moment; they let moments drift, merge, and resurface, like memory itself, within the unsteady river of time.
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Today's News
November 22, 2025
Sotheby's shatters records with $304.6M evening led by Van Gogh and Frida Kahlo
Rare juvenile Triceratops skull, over 70% intact, goes to auction at Gros & Delettrez
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Van Gogh Museum acquires two remarkable pastels
Montreal Museum of Fine Arts debuts major Inuit art presentation in newly renovated galleries
'Superman' No. 1 leaps to $9.12 million at Heritage, becomes most expensive comic ever sold
Fahey/Klein Gallery presents 'Tableaux,' Julia Fullerton-Batten's cinematic new exhibition
Todd Hido merges fiction and memory in atmospheric new exhibition at Reflex Amsterdam
Stacey Masson appointed Director of Marketing and Communications at The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts
Münchner Stadtmuseum opens exhibition revisiting Herbert List's postwar photographs of Munich
Charles Bell's Gum Ball I sets artist auction record in Heritage's $4.73 million Modern & Contemporary Art sale
Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen announces its 2026 program
AstaGuru presents rare and celebrated works of modern Indian artists at their upcoming auction
Tamiko Kawata unveils monumental safety-pin installation at Alison Bradley Projects
Maggi Hambling and Sarah Lucas reunite for dual exhibition
Cheryl Molnar explores nature, memory, and human impact in 'The Overview' at C24 Gallery
'Wonderscape' brings together Julien Calot's radiant paintings and Austyn Taylor's tender sculptures
Bienvenu Steinberg & C opens exhibition featuring Koo Bohnchang, Jane Yang D'Haene, and Peter Kim
Four UK artist-makers probe landscape, material, and memory
MCA Australia opens its major summer exhibition Data Dreams: Art and AI
Power Station of Art presents 15th Shanghai Biennale: Does the flower hear the bee?
The Huntington acquires rare Civil War painting
New exhibition at Kunstmuseum Ravensburg pairs Kathrin Sonntag with Gabriele Münter's early photographs
Peter Blum Gallery presents Su-Mei Tse's meditative exhibition 'This is (not) a love song'
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