Risaku Suzuki: Gallery Koyanagi.Risaku Suzuki's solo exhibition "Between the Sea and the Mountain--Kumano" brought together recent photos taken in the holy mountains of Kumano, the ancient Shinto capital. The sequence of photos reconstructs an approach to its sacred waterfalls. As usual in Suzuki's work, the evocation of the site's sacred character does not depend on any use of religious symbols. The clarity with which anonymous trees and rocks are captured indicates an immersion in the actuality of personal contact with a place, conveyed by an accumulation of discreet perceptions. Similarly, in his 1998 "Piles of Time" series shot at Osorezan, the mountain where it is believed possible to commune with commune with verb 1. contemplate, ponder, reflect on, muse on, meditate on verb 2. the dead, he reconstructed his journey, frequently conveying a casual "snapshot" approach. Coupled with the overall precision, blurs and accidental details lend the pictures a touch of unreality, signaling an eruption of another dimension of experience. The premonition of something unnatural coming, intensifying as the photographer approaches the site, ultimately signifies the incommensurable in·com·men·su·ra·ble adj. 1. a. Impossible to measure or compare. b. Lacking a common quality on which to make a comparison. 2. Mathematics a. . [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] In the gallery, the effect was both exquisite and fresh. Color photographs taken by a large-format (8 X 10) camera were individually lit by a single pin-spot, giving each picture an eerie glow, with every detail standing out. Minute detail communicates the photographer's desire to show everything visible; at the same time, it works (along with formal design) to claim painterly paint·er·ly adj. 1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a painter; artistic. 2. a. Having qualities unique to the art of painting. b. materiality. The fine mesh of young camphor camphor (kăm`fər), C10H16O, white, crystalline solid ketone with a characteristic pungent odor and taste. It melts at 176°C; and boils at 204°C;. leaves possesses the powdery pow·der·y adj. 1. Composed of or similar to powder. 2. Dusted or covered with or as if with powder. 3. Easily made into powder; friable. Adj. 1. texture of a gouache gouache (gwäsh): see watercolor painting. gouache Opaque watercolour. Also known as poster paint, designer's colour, and body colour, it differs from transparent watercolour in that the pigments are bound by liquid glue, which is drawing, and the splash of the waterfall against a rock is depicted as a white gap with knife-blade glitter. This interplay between photographic and painterly materiality is effectively balanced in those photos showing a contrast between light and shadow, sometimes revealing an unnatural blur in the otherwise clear picture field. The surreal emergence of a patch of earth against dark foliage, or dapples of light on the brightly lit surface of a rock, seems to deprive the scene of materiality or to indicate a superimposition In graphics, superimposition is the placement of an image or video on top of an already-existing image or video, usually to add to the overall image effect, but also sometimes to conceal something (such as when a different face is superimposed over the original face in a of different moments. Suzuki's combination of the snapshot approach and formal rigor rigor /rig·or/ (rig´er) [L.] chill; rigidity. rigor mor´tis the stiffening of a dead body accompanying depletion of adenosine triphosphate in the muscle fibers. interestingly compares with the method of Daido Moriyama. Despite the external differences in their styles--Moriyama, rough and spontaneous; Suzuki, precise and meticulously composed--they share the same interest in capturing an aura of a place beyond the visible, communicating the physical intensity of their encounter with the unnamed. Even Suzuki's pursuit of places charged with people's desire for the sacred echoes a theme cultivated by Moriyama in "JAPAN'S SCENIC TRIO," 1973-74, depicting Japan's traditional tourist sites. While Moriyama tries to arrest the invisible by means of radical blurring, Suzuki does so by insisting on the materiality of a photographic vision. The unrepresentable depth of the Kumano mountains, suggested by the accentuated clarity of Suzuki's photos, finally appears as a sheer trace in the vision of a waterfall as an exploded gap. While adopting a Moriyama-like snapshot immediacy to avoid the rigidity of a rational framework, Suzuki updates it with his refreshing loyalty to photography's essential relation to the visible. In the lyrical yet attentive manner of Stephen Shore Stephen Shore (born 1947 in New York City) is an American photographer known for his deadpan images of banal scenes and objects in the United States, and for his pioneering use of color in art photography. Stephen Shore was interested in photography from an early age. , he creates a unique photographic idiom for his own, more inward-looking generation. |
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