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NY | Chelsea

Hiroji Kubota

Photographer

November 18, 2015 – January 2, 2016

Kyaiktiyo, Burma, 1978, dye transfer print, 20 x 24 inches/50.8 x 61 cm © Hiroji Kubota/Magnum Photos
Anshan Steel Mill, at the time the largest steel mill in the country, Liaoning, China, 1981, dye transfer print, 20 x 24 inches/50.8 x 61 cm © Hiroji Kubota/Magnum Photos
A mass game to celebrate Kim Il-sung's birthday at the hundred-thousand-seat Kim Il-sung stadium, Pyongyang, North Korea, 1982, dye transer print, 20 x 24 inches/50.8 x 61 cm © Hiroji Kubota/Magnum Photos
Aerial of Guilin, China, 1980, dye transfer print, 24 x 20 inches/61 x 50.8 cm © Hiroji Kubota/Magnum Photos
Shenyang, Liaoning Province, China, 1981, dye transfer print, 20 x 24 inches/50.8 x 61 cm © Hiroji Kubota/Magnum Photos
Bayan Ul Hot, Inner Mongolia, China, 1982, dye transfer print, 20 x 24 inches/50.8 x 61 cm © Hiroji Kubota/Magnum Photos

About This Exhibition

In conjunction with Aperture Foundation, we are pleased to present photographs from the renowned photographer Hiroji Kubota. 

More than one hundred images by Hiroji Kubota will be on view in a two-part exhibition: color dye-transfer prints produced from 1978 to 2003 will be on view at Sundaram Tagore Chelsea and black-and-white platinum prints from 1963 to 1989 will be on view in Aperture Gallery.

Rooted in his experience of Japan, ravaged by destruction and famine at the end of World War II, Hiroji Kubota’s work is characterized by a desire to find beauty and honor in human experience. He was born in Tokyo in 1939 and began his career assisting Magnum photographers René Burri, Burt Glinn and Elliott Erwitt on their visit to Japan in 1961. Becoming a Magnum photographer himself, he produced major bodies of work on the United States, Japan, China, North and South Korea and Southeast Asia.

Hiroji Kubota was introduced to the dye-transfer printing process at the urging of a friend in the late 1980s. This costly and complicated process used to create high-quality multi-color materials for print advertising was mostly phased out by the 1960s, except for a few printers who continued to use it for photographic art. One of those printers, Nino Mondhe—who printed for Irving Penn and Harry Callahan—was known for using twelve colors instead of the traditional three. Kubota, dazzled by the spectrum of vibrant color Mondhe achieved, produced fifty-five prints and two triptychs with the master printer over a twenty-year period, until the materials ran out and Mondhe eventually closed his studio. This exhibition offers an extraordinary opportunity to view Kubota’s collection of color images produced with a rarely used technique that is impossible to duplicate today.

Hiroji Kubota’s numerous publications include China (1985), From Sea to Shining Sea: A Portrait of America (1992), Out of the East: Transition and Tradition in Asia (1997), and Japan (2004). His work has been exhibited around the world, including at the International Center of Photography, New York; Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; and Fuji Art Museum, Tokyo.

This exhibition is presented in conjunction with the release of Hiroji Kubota Photographer (Aperture, 2015), the first comprehensive survey of the artist’s work spanning more than fifty years of his extraordinary life and world travels. The book includes all his key bodies of work, including photographs from his many extended trips throughout China, Burma, the U.S., North and South Korea and his home country, Japan.

Click here for more about the book.

About Aperture Foundation

Aperture, a not-for-profit foundation, connects the photo community and its audiences with the most inspiring work, the sharpest ideas, and with each other—in print, in person, and online. Created in 1952 by photographers and writers as “common ground for the advancement of photography,” Aperture today is a multi-platform publisher and center for the photo community. From its base in New York, Aperture Foundation produces, publishes, and presents a program of photography projects and programs—locally, across the United States, and around the world.

For more information about this exhibition, email gallery@sundaramtagore.com or call 212-677-4520.

NY | Chelsea
Opening
NY | Chelsea
Hiroji Kubota: Photographer November 18, 2015, 7–8:30 pm
The Wall Street Journal
Press
The Wall Street Journal
Capturing Beauty and Vintage Prints December 2015

Hiroji Kubota (b. Tokyo, 1939) assisted several Magnum photographers when they visited Japan in 1961; 10 years later he became a member of the great cooperative agency.

Ocula
Press
Ocula
Artist Insight December 2015

Interview with photographer Hiroji Kubota.

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