HIROSHI SUGIMOTO | Past Presence

Hiroshi Sugimoto, Past Presence 001, Tall Figure, III, Alberto Giacometti, 2013, gelatin silver print, © Hiroshi Sugimoto / Courtesy of Gallery Koyanagi, depicted artwork © Succession Alberto Giacometti (Fondation Giacometti, Paris + ADAGP, Paris) 2020

 

June 6, 2020 | Reopening of the gallery

Gallery Koyanagi is pleased to reopen the gallery from Tuesday, June 9,
by reservation only for the time being.
By reservation only –> For details

We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.

 

 

HIROSHI SUGIMOTO | Past Presence
March 14 – August 29, 2020
*The exhibition extended.

11:00–19:00
Closed on Sundays, Mondays, and National Holidays
[summer holidays : August 11 – 15]
Gallery Koyanagi gallerykoyanagi.com

 

Past Presence

In 2013 MoMA commissioned me to photograph their sculpture garden.  Designed by Philip Johnson, it is home to many masterpieces of Modernist sculpture.  Among the many famous pieces there, a Giacometti sculpture was the first to catch my eye. The form is extenuated—as if all the flesh had been scraped off a human body—while what remains successfully expresses the condition of being in extremis. This sculpture of Giacometti had already achieved what I set out to achieve with my own approach to photography. I therefore photographed the Giacometti sculpture twice, once in broad daylight and once in the evening twilight. For me, it evoked an image of two figures in Noh drama. Noh is about dead souls coming back to life and becoming visible. In the maeshite (the first half of a Noh play), the dead take human form and lament their own passing. In the nochishite (second half), the ghosts of the dead reappear again dance a dance of bitter sorrow because they cannot rest easily in their graves. In the performance one catches a glimpse of the dead, though the degree of reality depends not just on the power of the acting, but, to a large extent, on the viewer’s own imaginative abilities. Photographing Giacometti gave me the sense of watching a Noh drama, because in Noh the past is reborn as the present. Inspired by Giacometti, I went on to photograph other sculptures in the garden.

Hiroshi Sugimoto

 

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