Category|洋書(展覧会図録)
Language| 英語
Contents|安藤忠雄建築展 in MoMA
Author|The Museum of Modern Art, New York
Publisher|The Museum of Modern Art, New York
Publication date|1993
Type|Paperback
Pages |75
Size|229×305×7
Weight|462
Price|E-19000-0-19000-20210508
The fifth and final exhibition in the Gerald D. Hines Interests Architecture Program at The Museum of Modern Art is devoted to the work of the Japanese architect Tadao Ando. His spare and subtle buildings, of concrete and glass, offer a contempor~y synthesis of modern occidental and Japanese traditions, and constitute an important and influential body of work.
The exhibition focuses on ten projects that reflect the developing interaction between Ando’s buildings and nature, as well as his refinement of interior architectural space. Most of Tadao Ando’s earlier work, situated in urban areas, responded to often chaotic surroundings by turning inward around courtyards protected by enclosing concrete walls, as exemplified by the Kidosaki House.
In more recent commissions for cultural and religious buildings he has had an opportunity to build in the natural landscape, where he has integrated built form with nature in new ways-opening out to it at the Children’s Museum, Hyogo, or burrowing into it at the Forest of Tombs Museum, Kumamoto, and the Chikatsu-Asuka Historical Museum, Osaka. Ando’s proposal for Nakanoshima has focused his interest in integrating landscape, urban design, and interior space. In this project, the architect, who has been highly critical of Japan’s cities, offers an alternate vision of their renewal.
引用|TADAO ANDO THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART・NEW YORK