Bruce Hooke: The Dark Forest, on view at Soho Photo Gallery from February 4 to 28, 2026, invites viewers to step into the shadowed, enigmatic spaces of the natural world. Hooke’s photographs capture forests in their most elemental states—fog-laden, rain-soaked, and stripped bare by winter—inviting both apprehension and wonder. These images draw on the ancient resonance of the forest as a site of myth and memory, a place where danger and refuge exist side by side.
In
The Dark Forest, Hooke explores the human encounter with wildness, illuminating how we navigate fear, power, and vulnerability within and beyond ourselves. Twisted branches, skeletal trunks, and misty expanses become metaphors for the challenges and mysteries inherent in life. At the same time, they offer moments of quiet reflection, spaces where beauty emerges from darkness, and the viewer can confront the unknown while discovering solace.
Hooke’s background as a sculptor and performance artist informs the tactile and spatial qualities of his photography. His lens captures texture, depth, and atmosphere with a sculptor’s eye for form, and a performative sense of presence. The images resonate with themes of gender, power, and vulnerability, revealing the forest as a mirror for human experience: wild yet ordered, threatening yet protective, chaotic yet meditative.
Across the series, Hooke emphasizes our evolving relationship with nature, reminding us that forests are not merely landscapes but living, breathing spaces that reflect our fears, histories, and desires. The interplay of light, shadow, and fog imbues each image with narrative tension, as if the woods themselves are telling stories of survival, transformation, and quiet revelation.
The Dark Forest is both a visual meditation and a psychological exploration, where the forest’s darkness is not merely a threat but an invitation. Hooke’s work encourages contemplation of the delicate balance between danger and beauty, solitude and connection, and the ways in which we find ourselves within the untamed rhythms of the natural world.
Image:
November, Courtesy of Soho Photo Gallery © Bruce Hooke