HIROSHI SUGIMOTO: HISTORY OF HISTORY
ASIAN ART MUSEUM OF SAN FRANCISCO
OCTOBER 12, 2007-JANUARY 6, 2008
Curated and installed by the photographer Hiroshi Sugimoto, the
exhibition "History of History," on view at the Asian Art
Museum of San Francisco, highlighted not so much Sugimoto's
photographic practice as his artifactual and curatorial predilections.
These, in turn, shed light upon his oeuvre in a way that a
straightforward exhibition of his photographs never could. Most of the
objects presented--many of them owned by Sugimoto himself--bear directly
or obliquely upon his photographic work, as with a thirteenth-century
scroll depicting a Bodhisattva, the subject of the artist's
"Hall of Thirty-Three Bays" series (1997), or the fossils that
appear in certain images from the 1970s. The exhibition ranged in tenor
and tack from the anthropological to the inventive, from the visual
immediacy of the photograph to the circuitous cerebrations of
conceptualism.
The first gallery in the exhibition might well have been titled
"Sugimoto's History of Pre-history" in that it presented
exclusively prehistoric fossils from as far back as the Silurian period
(425 million years ago). The alien beauty of these natural artifacts
rivals the hand-wrought intricacy of any sculpture. A sprawling shelf of
fossilized sea lilies from 400 million years ago reveals a mesmerizing
panorama of lolling plants whose wispy heads seem to flutter while the
rocky surface appears veined with traces of water that also seem to
pulse and course undyingly in the strange abeyance of eternity Remains
of a prawn and crayfish (from the Eocene Epoch) hung nearby in flat,
ghost-like silhouettes, betraying a different kind of preservation more
reminiscent of a photographic image. Indeed, while the presentation of
these objects obviated the camera as mediator, the direct, physical
relation between these expired objects and their phantom remains
conjures issues at the heart of photography and photographic
theory--especially the notion of the photographic image as a physical
trace or index of its object.
Sugimoto's photographic practice has long engaged with other
modes and means of representation and thus, by extension, with the
ontological questions that haunt photography. His photographs of wax
figures (many of them based on paintings themselves) and diorama
tableaux, for instance, take his imagery to a higher mathematics of
re-presentation. His images from the American Museum of Natural History,
such as Cambrian Period (1992) and Cro-Magnon (1994), like his wax
portraits of painted portraits of Henry VIII (1999) or Fidel Castro
(1999) stage subjects at multiple degrees of remove. Yet their presence
seems utterly, and thus deceptively, unmediated. Sugimoto's
reputation as a photographer rests on the cogent, thematic series in
which he has exhibited since the 1970s: "Dioramas" (1976),
"Wax Museums" (1976), "Theaters" (1978),
"Seascapes" (1980), "Hall of Thirty-Three Bays"
(1995), "Architecture" (1997), "In Praise of
Shadows" (1999), and "Pine Landscapes" (2001). A few
images from these series were present in the San Francisco exhibition,
but--with the exception of two full-sized pieces--they appeared in
shrunken form as constituents of other composite objects.
Time's Arrow (1987), for example, marries one of
Sugimoto's seascapes from the 1980s--reduced to Lilliputian
scale--with a gilt bronze reliquary from the thirteenth century. The
tiny image is thus framed just as the symbolic bones of the Buddha would
have been. Even the large-scale gelatin silver print, Caribbean Sea,
Jamaica (1980), formed part of a simple but striking installation: it
hung behind a miniature thirteenth-century pagoda fitted with a crystal
ball that refracted Sugimoto's expansive seascape into a diminutive
version of its normally outsize dimensions. The image appeared suspended
in glass like an insect in amber, echoing the fossilizing logic of the
exhibition's introductory room. Similarly miniaturized was
Sugimoto's series "Henry VIII and His Six Queens"
(1999)--photographs of wax likeness, presented in small frames and
arranged in a neat semicircle around King Henry.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
The majority of works on display (Mandala scrolls, votive images,
wooden reliquaries) offered insight into various aspects of Buddhist and
Shinto religious practices--subjects of enduring interest to Sugimoto in
both their material and metaphysical manifestations. In numerous
instances, he revealed his hand in the hanging and disposition of
objects--whether the display of a Buddhist scroll in a sutra case or the
juxtaposition of artifacts with modern, "readymade" objects.
Sugimoto has commented, "Contemporary art and ancient art are like
oil and water, seemingly opposite poles. Yet for the longest time now, I
have found the two melding ineffably into one, more like water and
air." The work Testament of a Penis (2003) consists of a steel
hospital gurney from the 1950s bearing a phallic stone rod from the
Jomon period (10,000-300 BC). The work thus unites millennial ritual
with the most contemporary of aesthetic sensibilities, though their
admixture here felt less like an ineffable melding than a violent
incongruity. Still, the museum's ability--similar to that of the
photograph--to make any object the focus of meditative reflection
attests, perhaps, to the ceremonious thread that unites these seemingly
disparate realms. And it is that thread, too, that seamlessly binds
Sugimoto's work to both worlds.
ARA H. MERJIAN is Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow at Stanford University
in Stanford, California, where he teaches modern art and architectural
history and theory.
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.