Subscribe to our newsletter

✕

Leave your email with us and we will update you about new editions, exhibitions, events and other related news.

Contact
Artists Exhibitions The Residence In Conversation Collect Shop
Cart 0
Reflex
Cart 0
  • Artists
  • Exhibitions
  • The Residence
  • In Conversation
  • Collect
  • Shop
  • Contact
    • Newsletter
    • Instagram
    • Facebook
    • Artsy
    • Ocula
We use cookies, read our privacy policy.
×
  • About
  • Installation Shots
  • Selected Works

Todd Hido
An Island in the River of Time

Currently on show in the Gallery
until 31 January 2026

Installation Shots

Selected artworks

Please click to enquire for availability and prices.
  • Todd Hido

    Collage #26

  • Todd Hido

    Collage #25

  • Todd Hido

    Collage #29

  • Todd Hido

    Collage #28

  • Todd Hido

    Collage #24

  • Todd Hido

    Collage #31

  • Todd Hido

    Collage #27

  • Todd Hido

    Collage #32

  • Todd Hido

    11925-2492, End Sends Advance Warning

  • Todd Hido

    10967-2498, Excerpts from Silver Meadows

  • Todd Hido

    2810, Excerpts from Silver Meadows

  • Todd Hido

    11988-0959, End Sends Advance Warning

  • Todd Hido

    11375-0033, Unpublished

  • Todd Hido

    11250-09, Unpublished

  • Todd Hido

    9551-a

  • Todd Hido

    2319-b

  • Todd Hido

    12004-12605, End Sends Advance Warning

  • Todd Hido

    1048-b

  • Todd Hido

    9248-a, Excerpts from Silver Meadows

  • Todd Hido

    11851-3642, End Sends Advance Warning

  • Todd Hido

    11682-5547, End Sends Advance Warning

  • Todd Hido

    10759-1221, Excerpts from Silver Meadows

Press Release

Reflex Amsterdam is pleased to present 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 Hido’s 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.

Hido’s works have always lived between documentation and invention, “paper movies,” as he calls them. “Shooting with people is different,” he notes, “that’s 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. It’s 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 isn’t that the goal of most vernacular photography?”

In this new body of work, Hido transforms photography’s documentary impulse into something more fluid, a meditation on time’s 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.

Back to Exhibitions
  • ©2025 Reflex
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Newsletter
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • Artsy
  • Ocula