James Hyde
Region: Northeast
I originally photographed the reservoir at Pyramid Lake in Nevada
in the spring of 2009. It was attractive as a subject because it was
so different from the landscape of the Northeast, where I have
lived all my life.
As I became familiar working with photos of California, the
landscape of Pyramid Lake came to seem less about difference
than distance. Distance is the subject of these paintings.
In 2012, I traveled to Los Angeles and doubled back to rephotograph
the same subjects. Appearances had changed even when
the places were recognizable enough for me to find the same
vantage of the lake or the same tree on a back road.
Looking at these large and detailed photographic prints, a visitor
asked me why I painted on them. Without reflecting, I replied, “To
make it real.” These photos are enormously descriptive—precise
in location and the moment. Painting—the application of color,
material, and shape on a surface—constructs a logic and brings
the experience of works into the physical present.