Japanese residential architecture gets show at Zaha's MAXXI museum

The exhibit traces the Japanese home?s development since 1945 Now on view at the Zaha Hadid-designed MAXXI National Museum of 21st Century Arts in Rome, a new exhibit traces the development of residential architecture in Japan after World War II. Unable to build large development projects in the wake of the war?s devastation, cities turned instead to creating small, single-family dwellings that were put up as quickly as they were torn down?and then reconstructed. This led to the reimagining of what a home could be, incorporating both innovation and tradition in the modernizing country.
?The Japanese House: Architecture and Life After 1945? explores the role of the home and its influence on the culture through three principal themes: The cross-section of tradition and innovation; the continuity of Japanese culture; and the role of the domestic space in everyday life. The exhibit incorporates the work of over 50 architects including that of Kenzo Tange, Toyo Ito, Kazuyo Sejima, and Shigeru Ban, as well as that of their lesser-known masters like Seike Shirai, Kazuo Shinohara, and Kazunari Sakamoto. A group of promising young architects is also represented.
Another view of House NA. Photo by Iwan Baan
Hideyuki Nakayama, O House, 2009. © Mitsutaka Kitamura
Life-size reproductions of fragments and sections of significant buildings such as the House U by Toyo Ito and Shigeru Ban?s emergency shelter are shown alongside drawings,...
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DISEÑO DE UNA CASA EN TERRENO INCLINADO. 16. Planos periféricos. |
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