Michael Lange has explored the various ideas of forest in his current book and exhibition project Wald (Forest).
The concept of the forest has been imaginary for centuries. Through fairy tales and mythical narratives, the forest has emphatically written itself into collective memory. In it, the forest’s visual substance mostly sees itself as a psychic area of retreat, in which childish longings and fears can live on. Yet in what way does the regressive foil presently cloud our civilization-based perspective of the forest? What does it mean concretely, what do we recognize, when we visit the forest?
For three years, he roamed Germany’s forests during the twilight hours. With unfailing intuition, he found those places of retreat in which the imaginings of childhood condense, in sober nature documentary form, into impressive visual coinages. His photographs were created beyond the paths and hiking trails, often in the thicket and dense undergrowth. They testify to the delayed hazardous enterprise of the adult Self, finally to arrive at the place for which the childish soul has yearned over all these years.
Lange’s forest scenarios are distinguished, in the sense of making sure, as deliberately timeless shots of nature, looking equally mythical and real. His motifs are atmospherically pervaded by profound peace and loftiness. At the same time, it is one of the images’ peculiarities that they hold back a secret when viewed. They draw from the moments of the dwindling or awakening light a concentrate that can almost be called tender. The determining factor here is the repeatedly raised question of how silence can take shape in the image.