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Black Sea, Ozuluce

Sugimoto Hiroshi (Japanese, born in 1948)
1991

Medium/Technique Photograph, gelatin silver print
Dimensions Sheet: 48.3 x 60.3 cm (19 x 23 3/4 in.)
Mount: 50.8 x 66.0 cm (20 x 26 in.)
Credit Line Museum purchase with funds donated by Sylvan Barnet and William Burto in memory of Yasuhiro Iguchi
Accession Number1992.214
NOT ON VIEW
ClassificationsPhotographs
Japanese photographer Hiroshi Sugimoto has captured breathtaking views of the sea from a perspective rooted in conceptual art. Sugimoto, who studied art in California in the early 1970s and who divides his time between Tokyo and New York, merges traditional Eastern ideas about the creative process with a 1960s Western minimalist approach. In much of his work, he contrasts light and darkness, void and substance. Sugimoto's seascapes, for which he has traveled around the world, are precisely planned: the horizon appears at dead center and all details of the place are avoided (he includes no land, no ships, no bird in the sky). The artist has said that his aim, in this series, is to evoke the emotional response of early man when he first encountered the vast open sea.

InscriptionsIn graphite, on mount, l.r.: Black Sea Ozuluce 1991. Hiroshi Sugimoto 9/25 366.
ProvenanceMay, 1992, sold by Sonnabend Gallery, New York, to Sylvan Barnet and William Burto, Cambridge, MA; 1992, gift of Sylvan Barnet and William Burto to the MFA.
CopyrightReproduced with permission.