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Toyo Ito - photograph, Yoshiaki Tsutsui (click images for larger view) |
71-year-old Japanese architect
Toyo Ito was named Sunday as the 2013 recipient of the prestigious
Pritzker Architecture Prize. This year's jury was again chaired by former
Farnsworth House owner Lord Peter Palumbo, as well Chilean architect
Alejandro Aravena, U.S. Supreme Court
Justicer Stephen Breyer, architect and MIT professor
Yung Ho Change, 2002 Pritzker winner
Glenn Murcutt, Finnish architect
Juhani Pallasmaa (who will be
lecturing at IIT April 2nd) and Pritzker Architecture Prize Executive Director Martha Thorne. The award will formally be presented at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston on May 29th.
The
Jury citation concludes . . .
Toyo Ito is a creator of timeless buildings, who at the same time boldly charts new paths. His architecture projects an air of optimism, lightness and joy, and is infused with both a sense of uniqueness and universality. For these reasons and for his synthesis of structure, space and form that creates inviting places, for his sensitivity to landscape, for infusing his designs with a spiritual dimension and for the poetics that transcend all his works, Toyo Ito is awarded the 2013 Pritzker Architecture Prize.
Ito began his career in the offices of Kiyonori Kikutake & Associates, one of the founders of the Metabolist movement, which sought to rebuild post-war Japan by drawing on the principles of biological growth to create an extensible cellular system of design and construction. Ito founded his own firm in 1971, beginning with residences like the Aluminum House in the Kanagawa Prefecture.
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Sendai Mediatheque, photograph: Nacasa and Partners Inc. |
This led to more complex and ambitious projects such as the 2001 Sendai Mediatheque, supported on a series of open steel tubes.
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Sendai Mediatheque, photograph: Tomio Ohashi |
On the exterior, each floor was its own unique finish. Read Ada Louis Huxtable's eloquent take on the building
here.
The next year, Ito collaborated with engineer/architect
Cecil Balmond to create the target="_blank" 2002
Serpentine Gallery in London's Kensington Park as a structured made from an algorithm of multiple interlocking iterations of a rotated cube.
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Serpentine Gallery Pavilion, 2002, |
Ito's entry in the
luxury brand bling building was a store for
TOD's in Tokyo, whose intricate concrete cross-bracing was said to emulate the form of the elm trees along the street.
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TOD's Omotoesando Building, photograph: Nacasa and Partners Inc. |
In July of 2011, in the wake of the devastating
Tohoku earthquake and tsunami, Ito, in a postscript in the Rem Koolhaas/Hans Ulrich Obrist book
Project Japan: Metabolists Talks wrote . . .
Since around the time I set up my own office in 1971, urban proposals such as those made by the Metabolists are rarely seen. We are still in the mode of introversion and abstraction. I think now is a good moment for us architects to break away from this mode and regain a viable relationship with nature.
Ito led the "
Home for All" project to create a communal space for people who had lost their homes during the tsunami. The concept won the
Golden Lion for Best National Participation at the 2012 Venice Biennale.
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