Khaleej Times

Sugimoto gives museum a facelift with old tree

- AFP

washington — For years, it sat in the corner of a Tokyo lumberyard, a tangled, muddy mess of roots no one wanted. That was until Hiroshi Sugimoto came along.

Now, the Japanese photograph­er has taken what was once the life support system of a medieval tree to help transform the ground floor of Washington’s museum of modern and contempora­ry art into an airy game of light and space.

The 700-year-old roots form the base of twin glass-top semicircle tables that are part of Sugimoto’s redesign of the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden lobby that opened on Friday, echoing the donut shape of the brutalist building conceived by Gordon Bunshaft.

“If people ask me to do this again, it’s impossible,” said Sugimoto, who has spent the better part of his lifetime documentin­g the “history of history” in pensive black and white reflection­s on the passage of time.

“Someone cut the tree and then found these roots are even more interestin­g, and so carefully dug it out, almost excavated. This is definitely one of a kind, nature art.”

Sugimoto, 70, sliced the root system in half, to dramatic effect.

“The cut piece is so fresh and new. Even though the outer part is very old, it shows the presence of the power of life, of light,” he said. Soft gray spiral chairs evoking the DNA helix surround the tables.

White vinyl benches sit atop large blocks made of the same type of glass used in camera lenses. Light passing through the prisms forms small rainbows scattered on the ground.

A multicolou­red light play takes place above as well, thanks to a Hiroshi Sugimoto

and architect Hiroshi Sugimoto conceived the redesign of Washington’s museum of modern and contempora­ry art. > 700-year-old roots 3.7-metre swirling sculpture hanging from the ceiling by Olafur Eliasson, an Icelandic-Danish artist who has also dabbled in architectu­re.

By removing an “ugly” dark film that covered the lobby’s 3,300-square-foot windows, Sugimoto created a more open feel and enhanced the museum’s views over the National Mall, the grassy esplanade that runs from the US Capitol form the base of twin glass-top semicircle tables > White vinyl benches sit atop large blocks made of the same glass used in camera lenses. to the Washington Monument.

A 20-foot brushed brass coffee bar displays a tin diamond pattern inspired by fireproofi­ng techniques used in 1930s Tokyo. Sugimoto even created the menu’s font.

But the original terrazzo floor, exposed aggregate walls and coffered ceiling remain intact for the museum’s first redesign since opening in 1974. —

 ?? AFP file ?? The redesign of the Hirshhorn Museum lobby and cafe by artist Hiroshi Sugimoto is seen at the Museum in Washington. —
AFP file The redesign of the Hirshhorn Museum lobby and cafe by artist Hiroshi Sugimoto is seen at the Museum in Washington. —
 ?? AFP ?? Afghan security personnel inspect the site of a car bomb attack in Lashkar Gah, capital of Helmand province on Saturday. —
AFP Afghan security personnel inspect the site of a car bomb attack in Lashkar Gah, capital of Helmand province on Saturday. —
 ??  ?? > Japanese artist
> Japanese artist

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