NEW YORK, NY.- Laurence Miller Gallery presents Pursuing the Sublime, an exhibition featuring five contemporary photographers in conversation with five nineteenth and early twentieth century Japanese print makers. The exhibition highlights shared themes between art of different cultures, centuries and media, including a strong sense of abstraction.
Common to all the works in the exhibition is the pursuit of the sublime, rather than the landscape itself. Many depict people in or passing through the landscape, while others focus on the paths and bridges built to enable a journey through the landscape.
Luca Campigottos 2000 panoramic Perito Moreno Glacier, Argentina, shows more than the majestic field of ice, at the forefront of the picture we see people gathering at a promontory that affords a magnificent close-up view of the ice. Shotei Hokujus 1818 View of Ochanomizu, depicts a parade of people walking beside a river with Mount Fuji looming in the distance. Peter Bialobrzeskis 2003 Allgau, from his series Heimat, and Tseng Kwong Chis 1987 Monument Valley, Arizona are a commentary on the role of the artist as observer and participant. Tsengs work anticipates our current fixation with the selfie.
The pursuit can be humorous, as in Toshio Shibatas 2012 Miyoshi City, Tokushima Precture, with a couple cruising above the treetops in an aerial lady bug car; and dark, as in Campigottos military observatory and cave high in the Dolomites from WWI.
The Japanese ukiyo-e prints selected for this exhibition depict a wide range of landscapes in which the human element is always present, whether featured in the design or simply represented by the artists vision framing the composition. In these images, the relationship between man and nature varies significantly. In Utagawa Hiroshiges 1856 Meguro Chiyogaike, three women are leisurely strolling beneath cherry blossoms in a composition that characterizes mans relationship with nature as serene. In Katsushika Hokusais 1830 Tokaido Ejiri Tango no ura ryakuzu, the design is dominated by the awe-inspiring mountain peak towering in the background, as oarsmen battle rough seas.
Works by Ray K. Metzker, Shotei Hokuju and Kawase Hasui are also featured.