Hiroshi Sugimoto (Part II)

Chrysler Building

Hiroshi Sugimoto, Chrysler Building (Architect: William van Alen), 1997, private collection. Courtesy of the artist.

Kriston
May 11, 2006

“Pushing out my old large-format camera’s focal length to twice-infinity,” Hiroshi Sugimoto writes, ". . . I discovered that superlative architecture survives the onslaught of blurred photography.” The skyscrapers and other modern buildings survive Sugimoto’s lens, but not unchanged. Take the Chrysler Building, as pictured by the artist: I can’t summon to mind another architectural photograph in which the building is so thoroughly transformed. It looks like nothing so much as a bizarre seashell or a tuft of clams, reflecting sunlight like glare off the sea. Stripped from this image is the building’s Deco confidence, forward-looking optimism, and man-made majesty. The building’s Jazz-Age crown even seems to lack symmetry. Or, more precisely, in Sugimoto’s photograph the Chrysler Building bears a natural symmetry, like that of sand dollars, which evolved over millions of years.

So time ultimately triumphs—not just surfaces, but really hits, like a physical force—in all Sugimoto’s works, from his dioramas and portraits to his modern archictectural photographs. But none of his depicts reveal time so well as his seascapes. Sugimoto’s hope in making this series was to capture something in nature that was truly “immutable”—he notes that even mountains and hills are subject to growth through geological activity and decline by erosion. Sugimoto turned to the seas. Cosmologies will differ; not even the oceans are eternal, says the geological record. And “eternal” is a problematic notion.

But when we imagine eternity, we turn to some of the very same places Sugimoto captured. Like the Pilion peninsula, overlooking the Aegean Sea—one of the oldest sites of Western civilization. “Pilion” is named after Peleus, the mythical king and father of Achilles. The peninsula is  the site of the Gigantomachy, an ancient war in which the giants tried to overthrow the gods on Mount Olympus. Heroes who made appearances in Pilion include Achilles, Heracles, Jason, and Theseus—practically a starting lineup of Greek mythology. (Or perhaps an Olympic team.)

Yet all that looks like fleeting, recent history in Sugimoto’s epoch-swallowing photograph of the Aegean from Pelion. The Peloponnesian War? A flash in the pan. Human history doesn’t register in these photographs. It’s astonishing and, I think, even a little alarming to see those elements of the universe that take no heed of us so well illustrated. That sense of the abyss feeds Sugimoto’s very Modernist confidence.

I’m sorry to see this show close this weekend. If you can’t see it yourself, at least read others on the subject. Start with Tyler Green (here and here), Charles Downey, and Heather Goss.

 

Related Eye Level Post: Hiroshi Sugimoto (Part I)

 

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