Hiroshi Sugimoto (Part I)

Kriston
April 12, 2006

In person, Hiroshi Sugimoto resists the descriptions that apply to his photography; he is not dour or somber but affable, even irreverent. His February 16 onstage conversation with Hirshhorn Museum chief curator Kerry Brougher saw Brougher playing the straight man to Sugimoto, who cut up on subjects ranging from politics to the '60s culture he embraced as a young photographer in California. On the West Coast, the Japanese-born artist began capturing time on film, a strategy he came to develop in subsequent decades in New York City. (You can listen to that lecture via podcast.)

An elegant retrospective at the Horn of Hirsh—curated by Brougher, in concert with David Eliott of the Mori Art Museum—highlights several distinct subject areas that emerge in Sugimoto's work. These areas of concentration might be better described as "phases" or "periods," to suggest their overarching theme: the passage of time.

Recent Posts

An art conservator holds a vacuum nozzle on a piece of artwork.
A peek into the world of conservation and the meticulous care of James Hampton’s The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nations Millennium General Assembly.
Anna Nielsen
Program Coordinator
Eliza Macdonald
Katya Zinsli
Detail of illustrated portrait of Emma Amos.
04/26/2024
Painter, printmaker, and textile artist Emma Amos created colorful multi-media works that explore themes of identity.
Detail of Phoebe Kline. She is sitting in front of orchids and smiling.
Docent Phoebe Kline began at SAAM in 1974 and she's still going strong.