art technology photo photographer bw electricity energy power abstract
✖ Via PDN Photo of the Day: Hiroshi Sugimoto’s Lightning Fields 128, 2009.

Artist statement:

“The word electricity is thought to derive from the ancient Greek elektron, meaning “amber.” When subject to friction, materials such as amber and fur produce an effect that we now know as static electricity. Related phenomena were studied in the eighteenth century, most notably by Benjamin Franklin. To test his theory that lightning is electricity, in 1752 Franklin flew a kite in a thunderstorm. He conducted the experiment at great danger to himself; in fact, other researchers were electrocuted while conducting similar experiments. He not only proved his hypothesis, but also that electricity has positive and negative charges. In 1831, Michael Faraday’s formulation of the law of electromagnetic induction led to the invention of electric generators and transformers, which dramatically changed the quality of human life. Far less well-known is that Faraday’s colleague, William Fox Talbot, was the father of calotype photography. Fox Talbot’s momentous discovery of the photosensitive properties of silver alloys led to the development of positive-negative photographic imaging. The idea of observing the effects of electrical discharges on photographic dry plates reflects my desire to re-create the major discoveries of these scientific pioneers in the darkroom and verify them with my own eyes.” (artist’s official website)

About PDN :

“PDN Photo of the Day displays photographs selected by the editors of Photo District News, a publication for photo professionals.” (read more).

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• Feb 09, 2010 link notes  [via] tagged: art  technology  photo  photographer  BW  electricity  energy  power  abstract 
technology regulator cybernetic feedback art photo photographer bw
✖ Via PBS - Hiroshi Sugimoto’s artwork survey (slideshow): “0028 Regulator”, 2004, Conceptual Forms series

Artist statement:

“The study of mathematics is thought have begun in ancient India and China. “Zero” and “infinity” were not so much discoveries as human inventions. The notion of length with no width is very curious indeed, the pencil line I draw being only an approximation of an invisible mathematical line. Endeavors in art are also mere approximations, efforts to render visible unseen realms. Among the notes Marcel Duchamp left in his Green Box are various mathematical notations. The Large Glass attempted to throw projections of the unseen fourth dimension onto our three-dimensional experience, much in the same way that three-dimensional objects cast shadows onto two-dimensional surfaces. While not wholly subscribing to the post-Renaissance “rational” scientific regard on the natural world, I especially appreciate those eighteenth- and nineteenth-century optical devices and experimental implements that gave visible form to unseen hypotheses. I have photographed suites of “stereometric exemplars” purchased from the West during the Meiji era (1868-1911), now preserved by the University of Tokyo. The mathematical models are sculptural renderings of trigonometric functions; the mechanical models were teaching aids for showing the dynamics of Industrial Revolution-age machinery. Art resides even in things with no artistic intentions”. (from Sugimoto’s official website)

Read about the centrifugal governor.

Previously on Skandalon



• Jan 22, 2010 link notes tagged: technology  regulator  cybernetic  feedback  art  photo  photographer  BW 
architecture photo photograph blurr confusion bw ruins history landscape
✖ Via The Smithsonian’s Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden / Hiroshi Sugimoto : World Trade Center”, 1997, Gelatin silver print on paper.

Artist’s statement: “Early-twentieth century Modernism greatly transformed our lives, liberating the human spirit from untold decoration. No longer needing to draw attention from God, all aristocratic attempts at ostentation have fallen away. At last we avail ourselves of mechanical aids far beyond our human powers, attaining the freedom to shape things at will.

I decided to trace the beginnings of our age via architecture. Pushing my old large-format camera’s focal length out to twice-infinity―with no stops on the bellows rail, the view through the lens was an utter blur―I discovered that superlative architecture survives, however dissolved, the onslaught of blurred photography. Thus I began erosion-testing architecture for durability, completely melting away many of the buildings in the process.” (Sugimoto’s official web site).

About Hiroshi Sugimoto: “Hiroshi Sugimoto (杉本博司, Sugimoto Hiroshi), born on February 23, 1948, is a Japanese photographer currently dividing his time between Tokyo, Japan and New York City, USA. His catalog is made up of a number of series, each having a distinct theme and similar attributes.” (Wikipedia).



• Jul 02, 2009 link notes  [via] tagged: architecture  photo  photograph  blurr  confusion  BW  ruins  history  landscape 

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