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Monday, May 12, 2025 |
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Alison Bradley Projects opens exhibition showcasing Kunié Sugiura's boundary-pushing career |
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Kunie Sugiura, Island_2 (1971), Photo emulsion and acrylic on canvas, 70 7/8 x 101 1/4 in. (180 x 257.2 cm).
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NEW YORK, NY.- Coinciding with the artists career retrospective at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA), Alison Bradley Projects presents Kunié Sugiura: Something Else, an exhibition of iconic works from different periods of her long career in New York, several of which have never been on public view. Something Else is on view through June 28th.
Through six decades of constant experimentation, Kunié Sugiura (b. 1942, Nagoya, Japan) has always pushed the boundaries of her practice in search of new expressions. From explorations of photographys earliest formthe photogramto the bold integration of painterly materials and techniques, Sugiuras oeuvre embodies the richness of photography as an aesthetic medium while redefining its apparent limits.
Soon after graduating from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) in 1967 and moving to New York City, Sugiura began printing photographs on canvas. Though initially inspired by the likes of Andy Warhol and Robert Rauschenberg, Sugiuras Photocanvas series (196872) showcases her singular perspective and sensitivity to the natural world. The artist often photographed botanical and geological subjects in extreme close-up, transforming them into quasi-abstraction with an enhanced textural quality.
SFMOMAs Curator and Head of Photography Erin OToole writes of the series: At first glance, one might not recognize these works as photographs
Printed on a rough canvas surface, they have a dreamlike quality and often dissolve at the edges, evoking a faded memory
They are impressionistic, offering more feeling than detail (from Kunié Sugiura Liquid Light in Aperture, No. 258: Painting & Photography).
A highlight of Something Else is Sugiuras monumental 1971 work Island_2, an exceptional Photocanvas portraying the surface of a Coney Island breakwater, which the artist has kept in her Chinatown studio since her inaugural solo exhibition at Warren Benedek Gallery in 1972.
By the mid-1970s, the Photocanvas series evolved into Photopainting (197581). Sugiura continued her signature printing technique of applying photo emulsion onto raw canvas, now presenting her photographs of the urban landscape side-by-side with monochromatic acrylic paintings. Tip (1978), on public view for the first time, features two photographs taken from a moving ferry, showing the Twin Towers glowing against the backdrop of a nocturnal New York skyline. Sugiura interrupts her shadowy nightscapes with an expanse of sky blue acrylic paint, infusing the darkness with a shock of unexpected daylight.
Writer Will Heinrich asserts Sugiuras Photopaintings are among the best surviving documents of 1970s New York and the particular downtown scene they emerged from. They aestheticize and slightly abstract the visions and textures of Sugiuras adopted home, depicting them both as they were and as she experienced them, as half-forsaken relics of industry and as monuments whose glamour draw pilgrims from around the world. Their eye-catching empty space comes out of wabi-sabi, but it also recapitulates the beautiful way that New Yorks skyline cuts narrow rectangles into its sky.
Together, her Photocanvas and Photopainting series exemplify the duality and ambiguity that characterize much of Sugiuras practice. At once photography and painting, mimetic and abstract, they defy easy categorization, letting different elements exist without opposition or hierarchy.
In the 1980s, Sugiura radically shifted her practice once again and began producing photograms. This is essentially a nod to the works of Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, whose legacy has been passed on to her through the lineage of Chicago photographers/educators Harry Callahan and Aaron Siskind to Sugiuras mentor at SAIC, Kenneth Josephson. The botanical photograms in this exhibition, using flowers purchased at local stores around Manhattan, express the artists continuing interest in nature despite her metropolitan surroundings. In these works, flowers are combined with geometric lines of crochet threads, further underscoring the dualism of natural and artificial elements.
From an unassuming rock to flowers from the quotidian market, the subjects of Sugiuras works come from her everyday life in New York City. Through unconventional techniques, the artist draws our attention to things that are often overlooked in our urban life, revealing the beauty in what might be, according to the artist, considered banal.
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