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{{nihongo|'''Takamasa Yoshizaka'''|吉阪 隆正|Yoshizaka Takamasa|extra= |
{{nihongo|'''Takamasa Yoshizaka'''|吉阪 隆正|Yoshizaka Takamasa|extra=February 13, 1917—December 17, 1980}}, family name also romanized as '''Yosizaka''', was a [[Japan]]ese [[architect]] and former president of the [[Architectural Institute of Japan]]. |
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==Early life== |
==Early life== |
Revision as of 21:01, 5 December 2009
Takamasa Yoshizaka (吉阪 隆正, Yoshizaka Takamasa, February 13, 1917—December 17, 1980), family name also romanized as Yosizaka, was a Japanese architect and former president of the Architectural Institute of Japan.
Early life
Takamasa Yoshizaka was the first born son of Toshizo and Hanako Yoshizaka. He was born in Koishikawa in Tokyo. In 1921 he and his family left for Geneva where his father was an official for the Japanese government setting up the International Labour Organisation. They returned to Japan in 1923 and moved to Hyakunin-cho in Shinjuku, Tokyo.
After entering Waseda University Architecture Department in 1938 he graduated in 1943 before being drafted into the army. On returning from the war he went to live again in Shinjuku but built himself a house as the previous one had been burnt down in American bombing on the 25 May 1945.
In 1950 he accepted a French Government grant to work and study architecture in France where he enjoyed two years working at Le Corbusier's atelier in Paris.
Life with Le Corbusier
Yoshizaka arrived in Marseilles in late September, 1950. On the 24 September 1950 he was shown around Le Corbusier's Unité d'Habitation which was under construction at that time. Two weeks later he was in Paris at Le Corbusier's office.
Whilst in the office he worked on a number of projects including: site supervision at the Marseilles Unité d'Habitation, a Law School in Chandigarh and Nantes-Rezé Unité d'Habitation.[1]
In 1951 another group of Japanese students came to France to study. Amongst them was Ura Taro, a mathematician. He and Yoshizaka became good friends and Ura asked Yoshizaka to design his home upon his return to Japan.[2]
Other interests
Yoshizaka was a keen mountaineer. He joined the mountaineering club at high school in 1935 and in 1960 led an expedition to Mt. McKinley in Alaska.[3]
When he was living in Paris he appeared as an extra in the Julien Duvivier film Sous le ciel de Paris where he cycles through a scene by the Seine on a bicycle.[4]
Return to Japan
On his return to Japan in late 1952 he continued his own works. In 1959 he was appointed as a professor of Architecture at Waseda University before forming his own practice, Atelier U in 1964.[5]
National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo
Le Corbusier's only building in Japan is the National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo. Le Corbusier's three Japanese apprentices: Kunio Maekawa, Junzo Sakakura and Yoshizaka were responsible for executing the plans and supervising the construction.[6] The principle of using so-called local architects to implement his designs was so successful here that Le Corbusier insisted it should be done for the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts in Harvard.[7]
Theories: Discontinuous Unity
Discontinuous Unity involves investigating the natural laws, autonomy, and individuality of the systems and construction of all of nature including the cosmos and discovering the relationship rules and patterns between these things and humanity and human living environment. Yoshizaka and his team then attempt to apply this as a basic ideology to all design and planning included in the human environment: architecture, town planning and even cosmic spaces.
-Hiroki Onobayashi, August 1966 "A Profile of the Versatile Takamasa Yoshizaka" Japan Architect, p32
Legacy
In 1971 three members of Yoshizaka's practice: Hiroyasu Higuchi, Reiko Tomita and Koichi Otake left to form the architectural practice Atelier Zo[8]. One of his students, Saito Yuko wrote the book Yoshizaka's Method about the design for Ura Taro's house and formed her own practice Atelier Site. Japanese Design Magazine Casa Brutus named him one of Japan's Modern Masters in a recent special issue.[9]
Selected writings
- Chandigarh: the new capital of Punjab, India, 1951, Tokyo, A.D.A Edita (1974)
- L'Unité d'Habitation, Berlin, West Germany 1956-58, Tokyo, A.D.A Edita (1972)
- Chapell Notre Dame du Haut, Ronchamp, France, 1950-54, Tokyo, A.D.A Edita (1971)
- Group Organization and Physical Structure, Japan Architect, April 1966
Selected projects
- 1965: Inter-University Seminar House, Hachioji, Tokyo
- 1962: Athenee Francais, Tokyo
- 1962: Gozu City Hall
- 1959: Kaisei Gakuin (Higher School), Nagasaki
- 1957: Villa Cou Cou, Tokyo
- 1956: Ura House, nr Kobe
- 1956: The Japan Pavilion at the Venice Biennale, Venice
Footnotes
- ^ Saito (1994) p45
- ^ Saito (1994) p56
- ^ Muramatsu, 23 November 1973, p89
- ^ Saito (1994) p51
- ^ Muramatsu, 23 November 1973, p89
- ^ Sakakura, August 1959, p36
- ^ Sekler & Curtis, (1978) p46
- ^ October 1993, Aimaimoko, Kenchiku Bunka Vol 48 No 564, p192
- ^ April 2009, The Seven Modernist Masters, Casa Brutus No109
References
- Saito Yuko, Yoshizaka's Method, Sumai no Toshokan Shuppankyoku, (1994)
- Spring 2005, "Do_co,mo.mo Japan: the 100 selection", The Japan Architect, No57
- Tejiro Muramatsu, 23 November 1973, "Dialogue Series on Humanity and Architecture" Japan Architect
- Sakakura Junzo, August 1959, "On the Opening of the National Museum of Western Art", Japan Architect
- Curtis William & Sekler Eduard F., Le Corbusier at Work: The Genesis of the Carpenter Center for Visual Arts, Harvard University Press, (1978)
- Hiroki Onobayashi, August 1966 "A Profile of the Versatile Takamasa Yoshizaka" Japan Architect