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Kunié Sugiura

Past exhibition
June 1 - July 20, 2019
  • Overview
  • Works
  • Installation Views
  • Related Artists

Kunié Sugiura

Past exhibition
June 1 - July 20, 2019
  • Overview
  • Works
  • Installation Views
  • Related Artists
Overview
Kunié Sugiura CKO #L1, 1967 Chromogenic print 11 x 14 inches 276 x 345 mm
Kunié Sugiura
CKO #L1, 1967
Chromogenic print
11 x 14 inches
276 x 345 mm

Kunié Sugiura
(Born 1942, Nagoya, Japan. Lives and works in New York, NY)

In a practice spanning over fifty years, Kunié Sugiura has negotiated between painting and photography, discovering and expanding through continual experimentation. At Nonaka-Hill, the artist’s first solo exhibition in Los Angeles, Sugiura presents hand-painted photo-canvases from her current Minerals series interspersed with her earliest experimental Cko series photographs from 1966-67, and a 1994 photogram/sculpture installation dedicated to her beloved pet catfish, Namu.

 

After realizing the limited prospects for an art career in 1960’s Japan, Sugiura enrolled at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and majored in photography under the tutelage of Kenneth Josephson, known for his conceptual photography.  Josephson had studied with Aaron Siskind at Illinois Institute of Technology’s Institute of Design, which stemmed from the New Bauhaus School, founded by László Maholy-Nagy.  With this lineage, S.A.I.C. was a rich pedagogical ground for experimentative projects, and through her expansive engagement with the medium of photography, Kunie Sugiura has extended this legacy by another generation.

 

While in Chicago, Sugiura produced the Cko series (pronounced “ko”) from 1966-67.  For these darkroom composited unique works, the artist used a wide-angle lens to encapsulate distorted nude body images inside ovoid embryonic bubbles, sometimes embedding humans into brick walls.  “Ko” in Japanese could mean alone (孤), or it could also possess a more neutral connotation meaning, individual or arc (個).  The Cko series reflects the artist’s ongoing interest in Existentialist literature, Kafka, Camus, and Simone de Beauvoir, as evidenced by Sugiura’s current Minerals series, also exhibited here.

 

Sugiura moved to New York City in 1967, arriving when Rauschenberg and Warhol were producing photo-silkscreened paintings which reflect a distinctly American popular culture point of view.  Sugiura also sought to bring photography onto the same plane and scale as painting, but she worked instead from the vantage point of a recent immigrant finding a new place for herself to start from.  Sugiura printed greatly enlarged close-up images of tree-trunk bark, beach pebbles and rocks in Central Park, running the image full-bleed onto canvas.  These images, while expressing her solitary observations, could be seen by some as mundane, but it’s the shared-experience of such ubiquitous information which makes them, for he artist, affirmative.

 

For her current Mineral Series, which recalls these large photo-canvases, from 1960s & 1970s, Sugiura returned to her homeland of Japan after more than 50 years of living in the United States, seeking to reconnect and contemplate her roots.  Finding herself interested in a deeper and more mysterious sense of time, she has bypassed genealogy, cities, events and histories, instead preferring to contemplate the billions of years and physical features of unobstructed, always evolving nature.  Sugiura researches and photographs geologic sites, prints her images at a large (yet still intimate) scale digitally onto canvas and, with a paintbrush, begins her image exploration, finding and enhancing interesting features, applying her intervening marks.  All-the-while, Sugiura meditates and fantasizes on the incomprehensible depth of time and the unknowable range of events captured but superficially by photography’s memorializing powers.

 

Something caught the artist’s imagination with one of her catfish subjects of her mid-1990s Animals series of photograms, which includes eels, frogs, goldfish, snails, octopi, squid, chickens and kittens.  This catfish, peculiar for its small scale, became a pet called Namu, a friend and a companion.  This relationship is memorialized, now 25 years later, with the presentation of his tank, activated by bubbling blue water, and three blue toned photograms which immortalize the trace movements of this intriguing creature.

 

Throughout her photographic practice, Sugiura has explored her personal and artistic subjectivity within the wonders of the Universal arena.

 

Kunié Sugiura has had numerous major solo exhibitions which include, Sugiura Kunié: Aspiring Experiments: New York in 50 Years, Tokyo Photographic Art Museum (2018), Time Emit, Visual Arts Center of New Jersey, Summit, New Jersey (2008) and Dark Matters / Light Affairs, The University of California, Davis (2001). Sugiura was featured in For a New World to Come: Experiments in Art and Photography, Japan 1968-79, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (2015), New Photography 13, The Museum of Modern Art, New York (1997) and 1972 Annual Exhibition of Painting, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (1972). She has received the Higashikawa Prize (2007) and the Artist’s Fellowship, New York Foundation for the Arts (1998). Her works are included in the permanent collections of the Denver Art Museum; The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; and the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography.

 
Works
  • Kunié Sugiura Sakurajima B, 2016 Pigment print, acrylic on canvas 30 x 40 inches 762 x 1016 mm
    Kunié Sugiura
    Sakurajima B, 2016
    Pigment print, acrylic on canvas
    30 x 40 inches
    762 x 1016 mm
  • Kunié Sugiura 300,000 yrs ago, Shiobara A, 2016 Pigment print ,acrylic on canvas 56 x 38 in 142.2 x 96.5 cm
    Kunié Sugiura
    300,000 yrs ago, Shiobara A, 2016
    Pigment print ,acrylic on canvas
    56 x 38 in
    142.2 x 96.5 cm
  • Kunié Sugiura Hawk Hunt Mountain_A, 2017 Pigment print , acrylic on canvas 60 x 40 inches
    Kunié Sugiura
    Hawk Hunt Mountain_A, 2017
    Pigment print , acrylic on canvas
    60 x 40 inches
  • Kunié Sugiura Kiryu, 2019 Pigment print ,acrylic on canvas 30 x 40 inches
    Kunié Sugiura
    Kiryu, 2019
    Pigment print ,acrylic on canvas
    30 x 40 inches
  • Kunié Sugiura Nasu B, 2018 Pigment print , acrylic on canvas 60 x 55 in 152.4 x 139.7 cm
    Kunié Sugiura
    Nasu B, 2018
    Pigment print , acrylic on canvas
    60 x 55 in
    152.4 x 139.7 cm
  • Kunié Sugiura CKO #L1, 1967 Chromogenic print 11 x 14 inches 276 x 345 mm
    Kunié Sugiura
    CKO #L1, 1967
    Chromogenic print
    11 x 14 inches
    276 x 345 mm
  • Kunié Sugiura CKO #L16, 1967 Chromogenic print 11 x 14 inches 259 x 325 mm
    Kunié Sugiura
    CKO #L16, 1967
    Chromogenic print
    11 x 14 inches
    259 x 325 mm
  • Kunié Sugiura CKO #L18, 1967 Chromogenic print 11 x 14 inches 255 x 342 mm
    Kunié Sugiura
    CKO #L18, 1967
    Chromogenic print
    11 x 14 inches
    255 x 342 mm
  • Kunié Sugiura Cko L17_V2, 1967 Chromogenic Print 11 x 14 inches 255 x 342 mm
    Kunié Sugiura
    Cko L17_V2, 1967
    Chromogenic Print
    11 x 14 inches
    255 x 342 mm
  • Kunié Sugiura CKO #L7, 1967 Chromogenic Print 11 x 14 inches
    Kunié Sugiura
    CKO #L7, 1967
    Chromogenic Print
    11 x 14 inches
  • Kunié Sugiura CKO #L8, 1967 Chromogenic Print. 11 x 14 inches
    Kunié Sugiura
    CKO #L8, 1967
    Chromogenic Print.
    11 x 14 inches
  • Kunié Sugiura Water tank, with choice of 2 prints from Namu series, 1992 Plexiglass,silicon and screws, water,food dye, Bubble Pump 30 x 40 x 13 inches
    Kunié Sugiura
    Water tank, with choice of 2 prints from Namu series, 1992
    Plexiglass,silicon and screws, water,food dye, Bubble Pump
    30 x 40 x 13 inches
  • Kunié Sugiura 4 catfish, 1996 Gelatin silver print on aluminum 20 x 16 inches 508 x 406 mm
    Kunié Sugiura
    4 catfish, 1996
    Gelatin silver print on aluminum
    20 x 16 inches
    508 x 406 mm
  • Kunié Sugiura Squids 1, 1990 Gelatin silver print on aluminum 40 x 30 inches
    Kunié Sugiura
    Squids 1, 1990
    Gelatin silver print on aluminum
    40 x 30 inches
  • Kunié Sugiura Octopi 4, 1990 Gelatin silver print on aluminum 40 x 30 in 101.6 x 76.2 cm
    Kunié Sugiura
    Octopi 4, 1990
    Gelatin silver print on aluminum
    40 x 30 in
    101.6 x 76.2 cm
Installation Views
  • Dsc5900
  • Dsc5819
  • Dsc5824
  • Dsc5822
  • Dsc5832
  • Dsc5821
  • Dsc5831
  • Dsc5825
  • Dsc5820
  • Dsc5835
  • Dsc5837
  • Dsc5844
  • Dsc5847
  • Dsc5900
  • Dsc5819
  • Dsc5824
  • Dsc5822
  • Dsc5832
  • Dsc5821
  • Dsc5831
  • Dsc5825
  • Dsc5820
  • Dsc5835
  • Dsc5837
  • Dsc5844
  • Dsc5847

Related artist

  • Kunié Sugiura

    Kunié Sugiura

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Artist Exhibited:

Kiyoshi Awazu
Miho Dohi

Koichi Enomoto

Daisuke Fukunaga

Shuzo Kazuchi Gulliver

Mitsutoshi Hanaga

Shigeru Hasegawa

Tatsumi Hijikata
Naotaka Hiro

Takashi Homma
Eikoh Hosoe

Kyoko Idetsu

Ulala Imai
Kazuo Kadonaga
Kentaro Kawabata

Zenzaburo Kojima
Kisho Kurokawa
Tadaaki Kuwayama
Toshio Matsumoto
Keita Matsunaga
Yutaka Matsuzawa
Kimiyo Mishima

Jiro Nagase

Tomohisa Obana

Tomoko Obana

Toru Otani

Kaz Oshiro
Sterling Ruby

Trevor Shimizu

Megumi Shinozaki

Kenzi Shiokava

Michael E. Smith

Hiroshi Sugito

Kunié Sugiura
Takuro Tamayama
Tiger Tateishi
Sofu Teshigahara
Shomei Tomatsu
Wataru Tominaga

Hosai Matsubayashi XVI
Kansuke Yamamoto
Masaomi Yasunaga

 

Exhibitions:

-2025- 

KEY HIRAGA: The Elegant Life of Mr. H

We Like Us

SAWAKO GODA

TAKESHI HONDA • TOMOKO OBANA

-2024-

JIRO NAGASE

ULALA IMAI: ARCADIA

MIHO DOHI

KYOKO IDETSU: What can an ideology do for me?

KENTARO KAWABATA / BRUCE NAUMAN

SHINJIRO OKAMOTO: TALKATIVE

SAORI (MADOKORO) AKUTAGAWA: CENTENARIA

Keita Matsunaga : Accumulation Flow

-2023-

NONAKA-HILL ♥ TATAMI ANTIQUES: A holiday sale of unique objects from Japan

TAKASHI HOMMA : REVOLUTION No.9 / Camera Obscura Studies

TATSUMI HIJIKATA THE LAST BUTOH: Photographs by Yasuo Kuroda

Sanya Kantarovsky: TO PRISON – with selections from Tatsumi Hijikata The Last Butoh, Photographs by Yasuo Kuroda

Kiyomizu Rokubey VIII: CERAMIC SIGHT

Megumi Shinozaki: Now/Then

Kenzi Shiokava

Kokuta Suda: Okukō 憶劫

Masaomi Yasunaga: 石拾いからの発見 / discoveries from picking up stones

Kazuo Kadonaga

SHUZO AZUCHI GULLIVER  ‘Synogenesis’

- 2022 -

Koichi Enomoto: Against the day

Shigeru Hasegawa: painting

Tatsuo Ikeda / Michael E. Smith

Hiroshi Sugito: the garden with Zenzaburo Kojima

Zenzaburo Kojima: This very green

Tomoko Obana and Toru Otani

Tomohisa Obana: To see the rainbow at night, I must make it myself

Daisuke Fukunaga: Beautiful Work

not titled not Untitled

- 2021 -

Kentaro Kawabata: 凸凹 Bumpy

Natsuyasumi: In the Beginning Was Love

Takashi Homma: mushrooms from the forest

Busy Work at Home

Ulala Imai: AMAZING

– 2020 –

Hosai Matsubayashi XVI & Trevor Shimizu

Megumi Shinozaki: PAPER EDEN

Sterling Ruby and Masaomi Yasunaga

Kaz Oshiro: 96375

Sofu Teshigahara

– 2019 –

Keita Matsunaga

A show about an architectural monograph

Tatsumi Hijikata

Eikoh Hosoe

Yutaka Matsuzawa
Yutaka Matsuzawa through the lens of Mitsutoshi Hanaga
Takuro Tamayama & Tiger Tateishi
Kunié Sugiura
Masaomi Yasunaga
Miho Dohi
Wataru Tominaga
Naotaka Hiro
Parergon: Japanese Art of the 1980s and 1990s
Tadaaki Kuwayama

– 2018 –

Toshio Matsumoto
Kentaro Kawabata
Kansuke Yamamoto
Kazuo Kadonaga: Wood / Paper / Bamboo / Glass

Kimiyo Mishima: Paintings

Shomei Tomatsu: Plastics

Press:

 -2025-

Artillery Magazine, Sawako Goda 

-2024-

Artsy, Nonaka-Hill

Richesse, Nonaka-Hill Kyoto

Bijutsutecho, Nonaka-Hill Kyoto

The Art Newspaper, Nonaka-Hill Kyoto

Meer, Kyoko Idetsu

Bijyutsutecho, Masaomi Yasunaga

Switch, Masaomi Yasunaga

ARTnews JAPAN, Masaomi Yasunaga

Richesse, Masaomi Yasunaga

Art Basel,  Daisuke Fukunaga, Imai Ulala

Art Basel, Kazuo Kadonaga, Sofu Teshigahara 

-2023-

ADF webmagazine, Yasuo Kuroda, Tatsumi Hijikata

e-flux, Sanya Kantarofsky, Yasuo Kuroda

Los Angeles Times, Kenzi Shiokava

Artillery, Masaomi Yasunaga

Contemporary Art Daily Shuzo Azuchi Gulliver

- 2022 -

Contemporary Art Daily, Tomohisa Obana

ARTE FUSE, Daisuke Fukunaga

Contemporary Art Daily, Daisuke Fukunaga

Contemporary Art Review Los Angeles (Carla), Daisuke Fukunaga

What's on Los Angeles, Daisuke Fukunaga

Hyperallergic, Daisuke Fukunaga

Artillery, Kentaro Kawabata
Larchmont Buzz, Kentaro Kawabata

- 2021 -

Art Viewer, Natsuyasumi: In the Beginning Was Love
Hyperallergic, Natsuyasumi: In the Beginning Was Love

Art Viewer, Takashi Homma

Hyperallergic, Busy Work at Home

Art Viewer, Busy Work at Home

Hyperallergic, Ulala Imai

Contemporary Art Review Los Angeles (Carla), Ulala Imai

Contemporary Art Daily, Ulala Imai

artillery, Ulala Imai

Special Ops, Ulala Imai

Art Viewer, Ulala Imai

artillery, Matsubayashi & Trevor Shimizu

– 2020 –

Ceramic Now, Sterling Ryby and Masaomi Yasunaga

Hypebeast, Sterling Ryby and Masaomi Yasunaga

Art Viewer, Sterling Ruby and Masaomi Yasunaga

Air Mail, Sterling Ruby and Masaomi Yasunaga

Los Angeles Times, Kaz Oshiro 

ArtnowLA, Kaz Oshiro

What's on Los Angeles, Kaz Oshiro

KCRW, Kaz Oshiro

Tique, Kaz Oshiro

Contemporary Art Daily, Kaz Oshiro
Art Viewer, Kaz Oshiro
Contemporary Art Daily, Sofu Teshigahara
Art Viewer, Sofu Teshigahara
KCRW, Sofu Tsshigahara
Hyperallergic, Nonaka-Hill
Los Angeles Times, Keita Matsunaga

 – 2019 –

Los Angeles Times, Tatsumi Hijikata
Art Viewer, Tatsumi Hijikata, Eikoh Hosoe
Contemporary Art Review  Los Angeles, Tatsumi Hijikata, Eikoh Hosoe

ArtAsiaPacific, Yutaka Matsuzawa

Los Angeles Times, Tatsumi Hijikata

AUTRE, Tatsumi Hijikata, Eikoh Hosoe
Los Angeles Times, Nonaka-Hill

ARTFORUM, Takuro Tamayama, Tiger Tateishi

Art Viewer, Takuro Tamayama, Tiger Tateishi

KCRW, Nonaka-Hill

LA WEEKLY, Nonaka-Hill

AUTRE, Takuro Tamayama, Tiger Tateishi
ArtsuZe, Takuro Tamayama, Tiger Tateishi

ARTFORUM, Review: Tadaaki Kuwayama, Rakuko Naito

Art Viewer, Masaomi Yasunaga, Kunié Sugiura
Los Angeles Times, Masaomi Yasunaga

KQED, Tadaaki Kuwayama, Rakuko Naito

Contemporary Art Daily, Naotaka Hiro, Wataru Tominaga, Miho Dohi

Los Angeles Times, Miho Dohi

Los Angeles Review of Books, Miho Dohi

Bijutsu Techo, Naotaka Hiro, Wataru Tominaga, Miho Dohi

Art Viewer, Miho Dohi

Art & Object, Parergon

COOL HUNTING, Felix Art Fair

Art Viewer, Tadaaki Kuwayama

artnet news, Nonaka-Hill

Contemporary Art Review Los Angeles (Carla), Tadaaki Kuwayama 
– 2018 –
Art Viewer, Kentaro Kawabata
Contemporary Art Daily, Kazuo kadonaga
Los Angeles Times, Kazuo Kadonaga
ARTFORUM, Kazuo Kadonaga
Contemporary Art Daily, Shomei Tomatsu
KCRW, Kimiyo Mishima, Shomei Tomatsu

 

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