Hiroshi Sugimoto
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- Опубліковано 9 лип 2024
- theartofphotography.tv/episode...
Hiroshi Sugimoto is one of the premiere contemporary artists and photographers from Japan today. In this episode we will examine his work, particularly his "collaboration" with last weeks photographer, Fox Talbot.
View more at aop.thepublicbroadcast.com
Interesting man!!
I'm not sure what's scarier the fact this video on UA-cam is 13 years old or the fact that 2011 was 13 years ago 😬
Sugimoto is a Japanese 'artist' who knows how to play up to the West and its ideas of what is 'contemporaray art'.
Love the 90s sitcom intro lol
I love his movie theater work.....really stunning stuff!
Really enjoyed this. Love learning and seeing what photography can be.
Thanks
Can someone please tell me some identifying information on the book? ISBN/publisher/editor ? Nothing in the description and the links are dead.
Primero de todo muchas gracias! Perdone que no hablo inglés. Como se consigue la técnica de enfocar a doble infinito? El objetivo manual solo me permite infinito no más allá... Gracias
@poppinfresh did you get it yet? Its a great book.
Photography on UA-cam would be so much poorer without you, thanks again.
WOW ted, you're soo young here!
Love this podcast ! Clear and instructive approach, well done !
I love your videos!
Ugh, I played around with out of focus photography before but didn't realise there was any appeal to it beyond my own interest. I love how it forces you to appreciate the essence of the architecture without getting caught up in the details. My first encounter with Sugimoto's work was his double infinity photograph of the Eiffel Tower. I knew I was in love.
Can you explain what you meant by focusing at 'twice infinity' to get the blurred effect? That part confused me :/
You can do that with Cameras that use bellows
dude, i just found you and you are awesome
Same here, I never heard that concept before but I'd like to understand it.
This is a great channel, and I am happy to be a subscriber. As a person deeply interested in photography, this channel has helped me learn a lot. Thanks for all your posts.
using a bellows camera you could extend the focal length past the lenses intended length, just guessing
Good presentation, just right for what I'm looking for in UA-cam photog/artist vids. Keep it up!
where can i find the book?? ~im interested in it
Yeah, You have a better eye for this than I do. Cant see it.
Nice, thanks a lot. Just one detail, Sugimoto is pronounced like in'Soogheemoto'. Very interesting individual.
I think you should do a series of Japanese photographer!
I saw one of his moonlight seascapes a few times and the exhibit was curated with a theme of "time". One photo of his has haunted or puzzled me ever since. From the passage of the moon, I estimate the exposure was about an hour or so. The sea should have been very smooth and structureless which was true for all the other photos except this one. You could make out a wave breaking on the beach - how could that be with such a long exposure? "Acquired taste" - I agree, there is something going on here but not quite sure what it is (sounds like a Bob Dylan song from Highway 61). Like very much your presentation of less known but yet published photographers with insights to process and context.
@kenjiari Except, you'd be moving the lens "backward" (i.e., towards the film plane), as moving the lens forward (away from the film plane) brings the focus point closer.
The seascapes look like U2's No Line Horizon album cover. Cool.
It is.
@@nickmoran1 Wait, really?
@@middle_pickup I believe it is Hiroshi's work. U2 and Hiroshi traded inage.
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
SUJIMOTO ROFL
SOO GHEE MO TO
hi all, great review, one of my favourites, just wondering if this guy is on instagram?
Enjoying your videos! BTW, his name is pronounced su-ghee-moto. Ghee as in Indian butter.
Sad that you ended making this series about famous photographers & books. But I understand, low interest, less money.