Landschap horizonaal: voor tundra met strijklicht, achter berg in schaduw.

Misha de Ridder

Trollvassbu

Created by Misha de Ridder. The artwork is a c-print on Kodak Endura, glued on 4mm dibond and displayed at 180 x 225 cm.

How does sunlight affect colour in a photograph? This picture by Misha de Ridder is dominated by a single colour: green. The long shadows cast across the irregular landscape suggest the photo was taken when the sun was low on the horizon. This raking light adds a warm, almost golden hue to the green gras. Take a moment to carefully examine the background, too. The vague contours of a bald mountain can be made out in the dark. Trollvassbu is part of De Ridder’s Solstice series, for which the photographer travelled to the north of Norway. With his photographs, De Ridder investigates the arctic landscape and polar light from both an artistic and scientific viewpoint. The absence of vegetation on the dark rock of the mountains in this region contrast vividly with the illuminated green grassland, resulting in an almost abstract landscape image. What would have happened with the contrast and abstract quality of the photograph if it had been made at another time of the day?

© Misha de Ridder, courtesy of the Foam Collection

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