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  1. 8 de ago. de 2016 · Kunio Maekawa is one of the most influential Japanese modernist architects who studied in France to apprentice for Le Corbusier and later designed the Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum during the 60s. His original house has been dismantled and relocated to the Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum. Maekawa house was originally built in 1942 during the wartime regime.…

  2. 29 de sept. de 2016 · Kunio Maekawa was one of the masters of architecture of the post-World War II period and is considered the father of the new Japanese architecture. He studied architecture at the University of Tokyo, after getting his graduate degree in 1928, he traveled to Paris to work with Le Corbusier where he remained until 1930.

  3. www.kinfolk.com › stories › kunio-maekawaKunio Maekawa - Kinfolk

    Kunio Maekawa. A new exhibition at Kinfolk’s Case Study Room in Tokyo. The Japanese architect Kunio Maekawa had an almost spiritual appreciation for art. He designed eight museums throughout his life, each one a stunning ode to artistry. His designs consistently managed to transcend the idea of a simple museum and consider architecture’s ...

  4. 9 de jul. de 2021 · This was the home of Kunio Maekawa. He is an architect who studied under Le Corbusier in France and came back to Japan. The house was built when he was at the age of 37. It is a very modern design for prewar Japanese architecture. Amazingly, this sophisticated Western-style home with some Japanese-ness such as the gabled roof and Shoji sliding ...

  5. ja.wikipedia.org › wiki › 前川國男前川國男 - Wikipedia

    近代建築 を最初に生み出した西ヨーロッパからみれば前近代的であった日本に、真正の近代建築を根付かせるという使命を自らに課すことから、前川國男は出発した。. 日本と日本建築界は当時の先進地域と同水準の技術的な土台、経済的下部構造または ...

  6. 4 de jun. de 2001 · This first book-length study of Maekawa Kunio (1905-1986) focuses on one of the most distinctive leaders in Japan's modernist architectural community. In a career spanning the 1930s to the 1980s, Maekawa's work and critical writing put him in the vanguard of the Japanese architectural profession.

  7. Abstract. This paper examines the Japanese architect Maekawa Kunio’s works and practices during the years immediately after the end of WWII. As an acclaimed advocate of modernism and in the face of the devastation in the wake of the war, Maekawa embarked on a series of noteworthy architectural projects creatively translating his knowledge of ...