
Todd Hido American, b. 1968
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60 x 49.5 cm / 24 x 20 in
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Edition of 5 + 1AP
96.5 x 76.2 cm / 38 x 30 in
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Edition of 3 + 1AP
121.9 x 96.5 cm / 48 x 38 in
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Edition of 1 + 1 AP NFS
187.3 x 149.9 cm / 73 3/4 x 59 in
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This haunting nocturnal scene exemplifies Todd Hido's masterful exploration of suburban America through his acclaimed series "Excerpts from Silver Meadows."
The image presents a stark residential landscape bathed in an otherworldly green luminescence that transforms the mundane into something profoundly cinematic and mysteriously unsettling.
Hido's signature long-exposure technique creates an ethereal atmosphere that seems to suspend time itself. The photographer's approach of shooting "like a documentarian but printing like a painter" manifests brilliantly here, as artificial lighting sources combine to cast the entire scene in an almost supernatural glow. The green-tinted light, likely from sodium vapor street lamps, creates a color palette that feels both familiar and alien, echoing his ability to find the extraordinary within ordinary suburban settings.
The composition speaks to Hido's central themes of isolation and hidden narratives within American suburbia. The modest house stands like a sentinel, its weathered siding representing the anonymous uniformity of post-war suburban development. The single illuminated window suggests human presence while simultaneously emphasizing absence—a visual metaphor for the connection and disconnection inherent in suburban life.
The pickup truck and snow-covered driveway add authenticity, grounding the scene in a specific moment while making it universally recognizable. These details contribute to what Hido describes as his search for places that remind him of his Ohio childhood, environments serving as "surrogates" for landscapes existing primarily in memory.
Shot on color negative film using only available light, this photograph maintains the authentic quality defining Hido's work—a sense that this scene "could have happened" exactly as captured. The vertical composition isolates and emphasizes the individual home, creating containment that intensifies focus on this particular domestic space.
"Excerpts from Silver Meadows" represents the culmination of Hido's artistic vision, exploring childhood memory, suburban decay, and psychological landscapes of American life. Through this atmospheric nocturne, Hido creates what critics describe as a world built from the inability to "go home again," constructing meaning from fragments of remembered and imagined experiences. The photograph transforms prosaic suburban elements into profound meditations on isolation, memory, and the mysterious narratives hidden within ordinary domestic spaces.