Los Angeles Times

These photos may consume you

Even as they spur a sense of unease, Mark McKnight’s images pull the viewer in.

- CHRISTOPHE­R KNIGHT

“Swallow” is not your ordinary photograph­ic portrait of a tree, which has been a common subject for artists almost from the 19th century start of camera work. Instead of intrinsic majesty within — or over — nature, Mark McKnight turns the tradition into something vaguely ominous and worrying.

The large, black-andwhite gelatin silver print in his debut solo exhibition at Park View/Paul Soto gallery shows what appears to be a mighty oak in all its sturdy, leafy, natural splendor, standing grandly at the top of a rise in an open landscape. Yet, surprising­ly, fully one-quarter of the image is obscured by a sensuous black swipe of deep shadow across the field, running from the bottom left edge all the way to the right.

The tree stands poised to be engulfed by encroachin­g darkness — swallowed up and consumed. Flooding the lower register, the shadow emerges from where the viewer stands, as if we are already engulfed by it.

Maybe we are the metaphoric­al source of the shade, projecting darkness into a vision of a tree that is just a remote aspiration. Formally, the dark, velvety smear pulls a viewer close to peer into the scene to see what, if anything, is going on beneath the lowered limbs of the sheltering tree.

McKnight deftly harnesses standard metaphors — the tree as home to the spirit, sanctuary of the soul; the landscape as an unsullied Eden set against a fraught humanity — and turns them to his own ends.

He does the same with photograph­s focused on clouds: Big, fluffy volumes overhead are shot through with vaporous light. Yet a storm also seems to be brewing, a looming heart of darkness within the ephemeral ether that intrudes on the possibilit­y for getting lost in an idyllic summer daydream.

McKnight has titled the exhibition “Hunger for the Absolute,” borrowed from the book “The Metaphysic­al Dog,” a collection by revered American poet Frank Bidart. The photograph­er is 36; the poet, 81. The choice suggests generation­al passage and autobiogra­phical specificit­y: Both artists are Southern California born, went to school at UC Riverside, identify as gay or queer, and focus their work on subjective intersecti­ons of the spirit and the flesh.

Clenched fingers of one man dig deep into the naked flesh of a second man lying on top of him in a roughly life-size image, their bodies seen in anonymous closeup with just bits of grass at the edges. Expressive­ly titled “Tear,” the word and the image can be read multiple ways — as an ecstatic rending or a deep hurt.

For “Untitled (Tree Void),” the hollowed-out trunk of a decaying tree seems to mimic a figure crouching on its knees in the grass. The landscape as a metaphoric­al body is again evoked, as it is in “Tear.” Yet these are not the idealized physiques of traditiona­l erotic photograph­y.

A list of the notable photograph­ers referenced in McKnight’s pictures would include William Henry Fox Talbot, Alfred Stieglitz, Robert Mapplethor­pe and Laura Aguilar — 150 years of the medium at once embraced, absorbed and reworked. The frankly symbolic, formally attuned, ethereally abstract and potently political all merge in a suite of eight highly engaging photograph­s.

 ?? Park View / Paul Soto ?? “SWALLOW” is dominated by a swipe of deep shadow encroachin­g on an oak tree.
Park View / Paul Soto “SWALLOW” is dominated by a swipe of deep shadow encroachin­g on an oak tree.

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