Sugimoto: Portraits, an exhibition of a new series of photographs by the renowned Japanese artist, Hiroshi Sugimoto, will open at the Guggenheim Museum SoHo.
His work occupies an exceptional position in the world of photography, combining poetic imagination and noble elegance with conceptual complexity.
Sugimoto: Portraits, an exhibition of a new series of photographs by the renowned Japanese artist, Hiroshi Sugimoto, will open at the Guggenheim Museum SoHo.
Commissioned by the Deutsche Guggenheim
Berlin and exhibited there last year, Sugimoto?s Portraits
series marks a new direction in the artist?s work. The
exhibition will remain on view through November 10, 2001.
We are very pleased to present these astonishing
photographs by Hiroshi Sugimoto, noted Thomas Krens,
Director, Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation. His work
occupies an exceptional position in the world of
photography, combining poetic imagination and noble elegance with conceptual complexity.
The exhibition was organized by Nancy Spector, Curator of
Contemporary Art, and Tracey Bashkoff, Assistant Curator,
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York. The works
presented in Sugimoto: Portraits were created as part of
Deutsche Guggenheim Berlin?s ongoing program of artist
commission projects, a program that has made Deutsche
Guggenheim Berlin unique within the arts community. New
works by contemporary artists are commissioned and
exhibited by the Deutsche Guggenheim Berlin, and
subsequently enter its permanent collection. In addition to
Sugimoto, artists who have participated in the program
include Jeff Koons, Andreas Slominski, James Rosenquist,
and Lawrence Weiner.
The Deutsche Guggenheim Berlin is an exceptional joint
venture between a corporation and a nonprofit arts
foundation Deutsche Bank and The Solomon R.
Guggenheim Foundation. With its program of artist
commissions, Deutsche Guggenheim Berlin operates at the
forefront of contemporary culture, distinguishing itself as a
museum for living artists. According to Lisa Dennison,
Deputy Director and Chief Curator, Solomon R. Guggenheim
Museum, Our partnership allows us to break free of our
traditional roles in the arts the corporation as sponsor
and the museum as repository. Although we both collect
art, we can now, through working together, act as a
catalyst for artistic production.
Born in Tokyo in 1948, Hiroshi Sugimoto left his native
Japan in 1970 to study art in Los Angeles at a time when
Minimalism and Conceptual Art both of which helped
shape his aesthetic vision reigned. As his work evolved,
Sugimoto created subjects of such conceptual depth that
he has continued to re-visit them throughout his rich
career. Inspired by the systemic aspects of Minimal art, he
explores his themes through a rigorous sense of seriality.
Five significant photographic series dominate Sugimoto?s
career thus far: Theaters (begun in 1978), Dioramas and
Wax Museums (begun in 1976), Seascapes (begun in
1980), Sanjusangendo, Hall of Thirty-Three Bays (created
in 1995), and Architecture landmarks (begun in 1997).
In Sugimoto: Portraits, the artist has returned to the wax
figures he first explored in his Dioramas series. Unlike his
earlier depictions of dioramic displays found in natural
history museums and tableaux of famous persons in wax
museums, these images are life-size, black-and-white
portraits of historical figures and contemporary
personalities, such as Henry VIII, Napoleon Bonaparte,
Voltaire, and Princess Diana. Working in a scale entirely
new to his oeuvre, Sugimoto isolated the wax effigies from
the staged vignettes in Madame Tussaud?s London
Waxworks, posed them in three-quarter length view, and
lit them against black backdrops so as to create haunting
portraits. His painterly renditions are lush with details and
recall the works of Hans Holbein, Anthony van Dyck, and
Jacques Louis David, from which many of the wax figures
were originally drawn.
As the exhibition illustrates, Sugimoto rekindles a dialogue
that has existed since photography?s invention: the
relationship between painting and the medium of
mechanical reproduction. To photograph a wax tableau of
Vermeer?s The Music Lesson in Madame Tussaud?s
Amsterdam museum, Sugimoto positioned the camera so
that his tripod replaced Vermeer?s easel in the mirror?s
reflection. Vermeer, who was known to use a camera
obscura to paint his domestic scenes with verisimilitude, is
here transformed into a photographer and Sugimoto into
the painter. Another work featured in the exhibition is
Sugimoto?s five-panel photograph of a wax effigy of
Leonardo da Vinci?s Last Supper shot in a Japanese wax
museum. The photograph, which spans approximately 25
feet in length, dramatically reveals the relationship
between artifice, representation, memory, and reality that
forms the core of this new series.