Sweet and clear is the windless night writes Leopardi, so are the images of American photographer Christopher Soukup who encapsulates in night shots the desolation of the city, when the human engine dies out and nothing remains but the artificial sign of our passage. Everything is still, suspended in time, more precisely in the 1970s, the period when the photographer, now living in San Francisco, was born. The shots are encompassed in this specific time frame, so dear to Christopher, who was born and grew up in those very years in the industrial Rust Belt, the protagonist of the American economic boom. One of the symbols of the economic progress of that time is undoubtedly the classic American car with its low, elongated shape and pastel colors, often featured in Christopher Soukup’s photographs. An additional vintage element is the retro style filter, which accentuates the nostalgic atmosphere of the past.




Christopher Soukup captures empty cityscapes, in which artificial light takes the place of the human figure, determining its presence even in its absence. Light, the undisputed protagonist of his photographs, always manifests itself in different ways, establishing the atmosphere of the shot itself. Cold and bluish in gas stations, warmer and pinkish when coming from homes, mysterious and diffuse when its origin is not visible.
The compositions of the photographs themselves and the feeling of illusory tranquility present in each shot reflect the influence of American painter Edward Hopper. As in Hopper’s realism, Christopher also conveys ambivalent feelings to the viewer: on the one hand the calm dictated by the stillness of the moment and on the other the uneasiness that anything could happen. The desolate streets become like stills from unrealized cinematic masterpieces, in which Christopher Soukup rearranges memories of another era, whether real or imagined, projecting the viewer into the past.
Christopher Soukup’s photographs will be exhibited at the group exhibition ImageNation in New York, 10-12 March 2023, curated by Martin Vegas.



