Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Know Your Architects. Fumihiko Maki: 25 projects that fuse the Eastern and the Western. 15 Mins Read. Fumihiko Maki is a Japanese architect who was born in Tokyo in 1928. Maki taught urban design and architecture at Harvard and Washington University while he was living in the United States.

  2. Biography: Fumihiko Maki | The Pritzker Architecture Prize. Fumihiko Maki calls himself a modernist, unequivocally. His buildings tend to be direct, at times understated, and made of metal, concrete and glass, the classic materials of the modernist age, but the canonical palette has also been extended to include such materials as mosaic tile ...

  3. Sep 6, 2017 · Pritzker Prize laureate and 67th AIA Gold Medalist Fumihiko Maki (born September 6, 1928) is widely considered to be one of Japan's most distinguished living architects, practicing a unique...

  4. Apr 15, 2014 · Fumihiko Maki: Designing from the inside out. People | Philip Drew. 15 Apr 2014. Fumihiko Maki addressed a full house at the Darling Quarter Lecture Theatre in Sydney for a CCAA talk in 2013. He spoke with Philip Drew afterwards about his approach to design, and the enduring relevance of modernism.

  5. Biography. Fumihiko Maki, chosen as the 1993 Laureate of the Pritzker Architecture Prize, is the second architect from Japan to be so honored—the first being Kenzo Tange in 1987. Maki, who was born in Tokyo on September 6, 1928, studied with Tange at the University of Tokyo where he received his Bachelor of Architecture degree in 1952.

  6. Fumihiko Maki of Japan is an architect whose work is intelligent and artistic in concept and expression, meticulously achieved. He is a modernist who has fused the best of both eastern and western cultures to create an architecture representing the age-old qualities of his native country while at the same time juxtaposing contemporary ...

  7. Fumihiko Maki, born on 6 September 1928 in Tokyo, Japan, is the 1993 winner of the UIA Gold Medal. He graduated in 1952 from the University of Tokyo and earned his Masters of Architecture degrees in the United States, at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in 1953 and Harvard Graduate School of Design in 1954.

  1. People also search for