Winner 2025 Premi Fotografia Femenina
LIEH SUGAI
“Kaikou”
With the support of
Lieh Sugai
Japanese-born Lieh Sugai is a visual artist based in New York, specializing in photography and video. Her work explores the shared memories between people and places, reflecting on how they evolve through time, events, and cultural shifts. Utilizing her dual perspective as a Japanese immigrant living in America, she brings a unique depth to her art.
While studying Graphic Design at Pratt Institute, Lieh discovered a profound connection to photography, which soon became her primary means of navigating and conveying diverse cultural landscapes, seamlessly blending conceptual and documentary practices.
Lieh was awarded the 2024 En Foco Photography Fellowship and named a finalist in the Penumbra Foundation 2024 Workspace Program. Her work has been exhibited at Foley Gallery in New York, as well as internationally at Les Rencontres d’Arles in France and 10 14 Gallery in London. Additionally, her photography has been featured in The Washington Post and Fisheye Magazine.
• SERIES •
Kaikou
KAIKOU - meaning "encounter" in Japanese - is a collected work of photographic images and chemigrams documenting my exploration of memory, identity, and the concept of "home." This series represents my personal journey of reconciling life between two homes, Japan and America, while reflecting on the ways memory can shape and redefine our sense of belonging.
Developed over several years, the series emerged during a time when I was unable to return to Japan. I sought out subjects in America that resonated with memories of my homeland, using light and shadow to capture fragments of recollection. These fragments are woven into a visual pathway toward understanding the essence of "home."
In creating KAIKOU, I blend film photography with historical photographic processes, such as the chemigram, to illuminate the transient and elusive qualities of memory. By integrating the analog precision of film with the experimental nature of chemigrams, I carefully shape light, chemicals, and photographic paper to create organic, textured visuals that reflect my encounters with fragmented and shifting recollections. Each image emerges through an intuitive process of experimentation, embracing the unpredictable interactions between materials to capture ephemeral moments that resonate with nostalgia and impermanence.