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Kunio Maekawa

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Kunio Maekawa
Born14 May 1905
Died26 June 1986
NationalityJapan
OccupationArchitect
PracticeMayekawa Kumio Associates
BuildingsThe National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo

Kunio Maekawa (前川 國男, Maekawa Kunio, 14 May 1905 – 26 June 1986) was a Japanese architect especially known for the Tokyo Bunka Kaikan building, and a key figure of modern Japanese architecture.

Formative years

Kunio Maekawa was born in 1905 in Niigata Prefecture in Japan. He entered First Tokyo Middle School in 1918, and then Tokyo Imperial University in 1925.[1] After graduation in 1928, he travelled to France to apprentice with Le Corbusier. In 1930 he returned to Japan and worked with Antonin Raymond (a student of Frank Lloyd Wright), and in 1935 established his own office Mayekawa Kunio Associates. His own house has been described as his starting point, in which he brought the idea of piloti inside the house, to create a two-storey space. The original house has been dismantled and relocated to the Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum.[2]

In 1955 he designed and build his first project: the Kanagawa Concert Hall and Library. His perhaps most famous work, the Tokyo Bunka Kaikan, located in Tokyo's Ueno Park was completed in 1961. The building contains a main, large concert hall, a recital hall, as well as a rehearsal room and a music library.

Selected projects

Honors and awards

  • 1953,'55,'56,'61,'62,'66 Prize of Architectural Institute of Japan
  • 1959 Decorated with Riddare av Kungl. Vasaorden (Sweden)
  • 1962 Asahi Prize
  • 1963 UIA Auguste Perret Award
  • 1967 Decorated with Suomen Leijonen Ritarikunnan l Luokan Komentajamerk (Finland)
  • 1968 Grand Prize of Architectural Institute of Japan
  • 1972 Mainichi Art Prize
  • 1974 Prize of Japan Art Academy
  • 1978 Decorated with Officier de l' ordre National du Merite (France)

References

Notes

  1. ^ Reynolds 2001, pp. 38–44
  2. ^ Fujimori 2008

Sources

  • Reynolds, Jonathan M. (2001), Maekawa Kunio and the Emergence of Japanese Modernist Architecture, University of California Press, ISBN 0-520-21495-1
  • Fujimori, Terunobu (2008), "Modernism and the Roots of Contemporary Architecture", Kateigaho International Edition, 20 (3), archived from the original on 10 August 2009, retrieved 29 March 2010