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Encyclopedia > Kisho Kurokawa
Entrance to the Nagoya City Art Museum
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Entrance to the Nagoya City Art Museum
The Nakagin Capsule Tower
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The Nakagin Capsule Tower

Kurokawa Kisho (In Japanese, family name first: 黒川 紀章, Kurokawa, Kisho)(b. 1934) is a famous Japanese Architect and one of the founders of the Metabolism Movement.


He was born in Nagoya, Aichi in 1934. Afterwards he studied at Kyoto University, graduating with a bachelor's degree from the Department of Architecture in 1957. He continued his studies at the Tokyo University School of Architecture under the guidance of Tange Kenzo, achieving a master's degree in 1959 and a doctoral degree in 1964.


Together with some colleagues, he founded the Metabolism Movement in 1960; its members were known as Metabolists. It was a radical Japanese avant garde movement pursuing the merging and recycling of architecture styles around an Asian philosophy. The movement was very successful, peaking when its members received praise for the Takara Beautillion at the Osaka World Expo 1970. However, the group broke up shortly thereafter.


Kurokawa has a daughter from his first marriage, who works in the area of landscape architecture. His second marriage is to Wakao Ayako (In Japanese, family name first: 若尾文子), an actress with some notable films in the 1950s and 1960s. Kurokawa's younger brother works in industrial design, but has also cooperated with Kurokawa on some architecture projects.


Kurokawa is the founder and President of Kisho Kurokawa Architect & Associates, established on April 8 1962. The company has its head office in Tokyo, and branch offices in Osaka, Nagoya, Kazakhstan, Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia), and Beijing (China). The company is registered with the Japanese Government as a First Class Architects Office .

Contents

Works

(sorted by the year of completion)


Works during the 1970s

  • Nakagin Capsule Tower (Ginza, Tokyo, Japan 1970-1972)
  • Sony Tower (Osaka, Japan, 1972-1976)
  • Tateshina Planetarium (Hiroshima City, Japan, 1976)
  • Headquarters of the Japanese Red Cross Society (Tokyo, Japan, 1975-1977)
  • National Museum of Ethnology (Osaka, Japan, 1973-1977)

Works during the 1980s

  • Saitama Prefectural Museum of Modern Art (Saitama, Japan, 1978-1982)
  • National Bunraku Theater (Osaka, Japan, 1979-1983)
  • Wacoal Kojimachi Building (Tokyo, Japan, 1982-1984)
  • Chokaso (Tokyo, Japan, 1985-1987)
  • Nagoya City Art Museum (Nagoya, Japan, 1983-1987)
  • Japanese-German Center of Berlin (Berlin, Germany, 1985-1988)
  • Osaka Prefectural Government Offices (Osaka, Japan, 1988)
  • Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art (Hiroshima, Japan, 1988-1989)

Works during the 1990s

Works from 2000 onward

See also

External links

  • Kisho Kurokawa Homepage (http://www.kisho.co.jp/index-ie.html)
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Category:Kurokawa Kisho

  Results from FactBites:
 
Kurokawa Kisho - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (376 words)
Kurokawa Kisho (in Japanese, family name first: 黒川紀章 Kurokawa Kishō; born April 8, 1934) is a famous Japanese architect and one of the founders of the Metabolist Movement.
Kurokawa has a daughter from his first marriage, who works in the area of landscape architecture.
Kurokawa is the founder and President of Kisho Kurokawa Architect and Associates, established on 8 April 1962.
CUBE : Centre for the Urban Built Environment : Exhibitions (340 words)
Above all else the exhibition is about Kurokawa’s unrelenting passion and thoughts on architecture fused with his philosophical ideas – and in particular his philosophy of symbiosis which has established him as one of the world’s leading thinkers on architecture.
From as early as 1959 Kisho Kurokawa was putting forward a new architectural paradigm which envisaged cities and architecture as organisms capable of growth and change.
Kurokawa argues that we have moved inexorably from an architectural culture based on the Modernists’ commitment to the Machine, to a new epoch which he calls the ‘Age of Life’.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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