ITHACA, NY.- Alison Bradley Projects announced Kunié Sugiura: Discoveries, a new retrospective exhibition, on view at the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University (Ithaca, NY) from Thursday, September 18, through Sunday, December 21, 2025.
This exhibition focuses on the relentless experimentation and scientific exploration, driven by artistic impulse, of Kunié Sugiura's sixty-year engagement with photography. Born in Nagoya, Japan, in 1942, and one of the first students at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago to specialize in photography in the 1960s, Sugiura has worked for most of her life in the New York City studio where she has also lived since 1974. There, she has created experimental series that pay little mind to the traditional trappings of and discourses around photography, and stand apart from the trends that have variously defined the medium over the decades. Her oeuvre includes sculptural assemblages that combine photography and painting, large-scale photographic canvases, and a range of photograms of botanical, human, and animal subjects.
Even as she firmly established her career and life in the United States, Sugiura maintained close ties with Japan, and these deep connections to heritage reveal themselves in her works in both subtle and overt ways. Attuned to aspects of the natural world, from the fleeting beauty of flowers to the playful and humorous behavior of people and animals, to the patterns of geologic formations, her conceptual innovations in the deployment of photographic techniques led to discoveries and expressions of place, time, and self.
This exhibition was curated by Kate Addleman-Frankel, formerly the Gary and Ellen Davis Curator of Photography, and Ellen Avril, chief curator and the Judith H. Stoikov Curator of Asian Art, assisted by Marié Nobematsu-Le Gassic, MFA 2025. Major support was provided by the Richard Sukenik 59 Endowment for Photography and a grant from the New York State Council on the Arts. The Museum is grateful for the assistance of Sugiura Studio and Alison Bradley Projects.