To see more light

15 MINUTES

From landscape to dreamscape, using the medium of Hawaiian lava

Warning: this film features rapidly flashing images that can be distressing to photosensitive viewers.

Nature gives us innumerable strange wonders. But among the phenomena that we might find uncanny, mesmerising or sublime, lava flows are especially otherworldly – solid rock turned viscous and flowing; slow-moving streams or fields of liquified stone bulging into peculiar shapes, sometimes revealing a blazing hot centre or ejecting a burst of flame. There’s something of the logic of dreams, a surreal quality, to lava’s motion and mood. It’s fitting then that Kurtis Hough, an artist and filmmaker with an abiding interest in dreams and nature, would create a film in which lava is a central substance.

A work of rigorous experimentation and poetic exploration, Hough’s short film To See More Light combines animation, time-lapse cinematography and brilliantly manipulated imagery set to a pulsing, propulsive composition of the same name by the saxophonist Colin Stetson that holds us in a state of constant tension. Visually, the film is unceasing transformation, first in morphing abstractions that evoke both cosmic and atomic worlds, then in a stunning sequence of lava flowing towards the sea, eventually graced by strange, ever-blossoming white trees.

Hough notes that, when he was shooting the lava at the Kilauea Volcano in Hawai‘i, lines from the Leonard Cohen song ‘Anthem’ (1992) kept coming to mind – ‘There is a crack in everything, that’s how the light gets in.’ The cracks in lava, though, seem to be more about letting light out, a kind of dreamlike inversion of Cohen’s resonant observation. Hough’s decision to make his film in black and white accentuates this sense of illumination emerging from within, turning every frame into an exploration of the interplay between light and dark. But he also explains his choice in relation to himself, saying: ‘I feel like I don’t dream in colour.’ While Cohen’s song is about society, perhaps specifically about democracy, Hough takes this notion of the transfer of light into the internal realm, drawing on the natural world to offer a vision of the unconscious that’s as personal as it is expansive and epic.

Written by Kellen Quinn

Director: Kurtis Hough

Explore more

The Milky Way galaxy over a mountainous silhouette at night, with bright spots resembling searchlights crossing the sky.

Journey into the deep history of the cosmos via the Mauna Loa volcano

Directed by Lance Page

A seal sitting on green grass near the ocean with an upside-down group of people and buildings in the background.
PLACE

Journey to the Bering Sea in search of a deep ‘not knowing’

Directed by Sky Hopinka

Black-and-white photo of two people; one holding binoculars to their eyes, the other wearing a hat and looking down.

An audiovisual odyssey into the heavens of astronomy and myth

A film by Bill Morrison

Painting of a cat lying by a window with blue shutters, with a red and purple sky with the moon in the distance

From the rhythms of the dying day to a cosmic journey of transformation

Directed by Simon Feat

A moody cityscape with dark buildings and bright yellow-lit rooms, featuring silhouetted figures inside.

An odyssey into the Parisian night reflects the allure and anxieties of cities

Directed by Adrien Mérigeau

Close-up of an older man in a flat cap and scarf, looking out over a misty rural landscape with blurred farmland in the background.
POETRY

Irish hills, folk music and David Whyte’s poetry form a fleeting, meditative moment

Directed by Andrew Hinton