Hiroshi Sugimoto (B. 1948)
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Hiroshi Sugimoto (B. 1948)

Ohio Theatre, Ohio

Details
Hiroshi Sugimoto (B. 1948)
Ohio Theatre, Ohio
signed, titled, numbered and dated 'Ohio Theatre Ohio 1980 Hiroshi Sugimoto 9/25' (on the reverse)
gelatin silver print
image: 16 5/8 x 21 3/8in. (42.2 x 54.3cm.)
sheet: 20 x 23 7/8in. (50.8 x 60.7cm.)
Executed in 1980, this work is number nine from an edition of twenty-five
Provenance
Sogacho Exhibit Space, Tokyo.
Acquired from the above by the present owner in 1988.
Literature
Hans Belting, Theaters: Hiroshi Sugimoto, New York 2000 (illustrated, p. 75).
Exhibited
New York, Sonnabend Gallery, Hiroshi Sugimoto, 1988 (another from the larger edition exhibited, illustrated, p. 63). This exhibition later travelled to Tokyo, Sagacho Exhibit Space and Tokyo and Zeito Photo Salon.
Locarno, Galleria SPSAS Locarno, Motion Picture by Sugimoto, 1995 (another from the larger edition exhibited, illustrated, p. 11).
Tokyo, Mori Art Museum, Hiroshi Sugimoto, 2005-2006 (another from the edition exhibited, illustrated, p. 89). This exhibition later travelled to Washington D.C., Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden.
Special Notice
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 20% on the buyer's premium.

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Lot Essay

'Photography in itself has a very strange magical power and I wanted to investigate this particularly interesting aspect of photography... the way we see things and the way the camera sees things. The camera in itself is a kind of duplicate visual mechanism. It works much the same way our eyesight does, only the camera is a machine and our eyes are mind operated. What I want to explore is how we can see things together with an artificial eye - how we can use the camera - to represent things in a unique way. Photography is a rather young medium and I don't think it has been entirely explored yet. I mean, for like a hundred years people were just amazed and surprised that this machine could capture the way we see the world - even better than painters. So people didn't think of it doing anything more. Now I think it's time for photography to re-surprise with what it can do. [...] I have a scientific approach, I have to do a series of studies, tests and so forth. But I always come up with almost impossible ideas. For example, for the movie theaters I made a series of tests, and the idea was to get the entire exposure of the movie and see how it looked. I envisioned that the movie projected might burn out into an overexposure, gleaming white screen... you know, like a religious experience, like Mother Mary making an appearance. Only ironically the intense light shining in the darkness is a Hollywood movie. That was my vision. The next step was, how do I make it happen? That's why I have to test out my ideas. I wake up with some impossible vision and try to make this vision happen. That is how I work.'

(H. Sugimoto quoted in 'Conversation with Hiroshi Sugimoto' by Helena Tatay Huici, SUGIMOTO, exh. cat., Madrid, Fundación "la Caixa", 1998, pp. 14 and 16)

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