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Hiroshi Sugimoto

Time Machine


  • Hatje Cantz (T&H)
  • Expo : 11/10/2023 - 01/01/2024, Hayward Gallery, London
  • by Hiroshi Sugimoto, James Attlee, Geoffrey Batchen, Allie Biswas
A new, comprehensive survey of Sugimoto's five-decade career, from grand dioramas and seascapes to eerie portraits of wax effigies and more. Through his expansive exploration of the possibilities of still images, Hiroshi Sugimoto has created some of the most alluringly enigmatic photographs of our time - pictures that are meticulously crafted and deeply thought-provoking, familiar yet tantalizingly ambiguous.

ISBN 9783775755320 | EN | HB
€60,50
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Publisher Hatje Cantz (T&H)
ISBN 9783775755320
Author(s) Hiroshi Sugimoto, James Attlee, Geoffrey Batchen, Allie Biswas
Publication date October 2023
Edition Hardback
Dimensions 280 x 240 mm
Illustrations 130 col.ill.
Pages 216
Language(s) English ed.
Exhibition Hayward Gallery, London
Description

A new, comprehensive survey of Sugimoto's five-decade career, from grand dioramas and seascapes to eerie portraits of wax effigies and more.

Through his expansive exploration of the possibilities of still images, Hiroshi Sugimoto has created some of the most alluringly enigmatic photographs of our time-pictures that are meticulously crafted and deeply thought-provoking, familiar yet tantalizingly ambiguous. Hiroshi Sugimoto: Time Machine is a comprehensive survey of work produced over the past five decades, featuring selections from all of Sugimoto's major series, as well as lesser-known works that illuminate his innovative, conceptually driven approach to making pictures.
Texts by international writers, artists and scholars including Geoffrey Batchen, Edmund de Waal, Mami Kataoka, Ralph Rugoff, Lara Strongman and Margaret Wertheim highlight his work's philosophical yet playful inquiry into the nature of representation and art, our understanding of time and memory, and the paradoxical character of photography as a medium so well suited to both documenting and invention.
Hiroshi Sugimoto (born 1948) has exhibited extensively in major museums and galleries throughout the world, and his work is held in numerous public collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo; National Gallery, London; National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo; Smithsonian, Washington, DC; and Tate, London, among others. Sugimoto divides his time between Tokyo and New York City.