Posts Tagged ‘Japanese architecture’

Aalto’s Villa Mairea in Finland

Saturday, June 20th, 2009

Aalto's Villa Mairea in Noormarkku, Finland

Alvar Aalto’s Villa Mairea in Noormarkku, Finland, built between 1937 and 1939 as a rural retreat, is considered one of the greatest houses of the 20th century. Japanese architect Shigeru Ban, who curated a major retrospective of Aalto’s work at the Barbican in London in 2007, has said that photographs give no real sense of Aalto’s buildings. Short of flying to Finland, though, photos are what we have at this moment. Flickr photos are by  08 ROTCH simoneauFrans Drewniak (drz image), Siren Fay, Andrew Paul Carr, bttgcm, Ashley Wendell, David Gross and Ettubrutae. For further reading on this amazing house, there’s an excellent article on Aalto and Ban’s curation of his work at designbuild or look at Phaidon’s Villa Mairea Aid. The house shows evidence of Aalto’s various interests in Japanese design, in sustainable architecture, and in simple, natural materials used in an experimental way. Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater was also an influence, and you can see that here, but while I appreciate Fallingwater, I love Villa Mairea.

interior

Villa Mairea - Aalto

Villa Mairea IX / Alvar Aalto

VM121

VM122

villa mairea by ashley wendell

VM110

VM095

Villa Mairea - Aalto

Villa Mairea - Aalto

Click below for more photos.

(more…)

Terunobu Fujimori, Japanese architecture historian turned architect

Saturday, February 7th, 2009

IMG_4307

Terunobu Fujimori has been called the world’s only “surreal architect.” This is obviously not true, but there is a fantastical quality about his work that isn’t typical among architects, even when they’re trying for the new, the strange or the sci-fi. Fujimori is interesting because his is a down-to-earth fantasy, using simple, elemental materials that highlight the relationship of architecture to the ground from which its materials come. He’s not a traditionalist even despite the fact that you feel you can see all of Japanese architectural history in his work, both high and low, from traditional peasant houses to folk tales to the fortresses in Ran or Rashomon. For more about him see also pushpull. Fujimori curated a celebrated exhibition in the Japanese pavilion at the 2006 Venice Biennale of Architecture that’s worth looking at here. Photos are from Flickr and designboom. Immediately above and below, Fujimori’s Coal House, sheathed in satiny black charred wood that is a traditional method of fiinishing and preserving wood but that also somehow suggests the fires that destroyed so many of Japan’s wooden castles and houses.

IMG_4310

IMG_4312

IMG_4365

Building by Terunobu Fujimori

Above, Nemunoki Art Museum by Terunobu Fujimori and Yoshio Uchika. Below, his Leek House, with a lattice roof with chives growing from it.

Tenurobu Fujimori's Leek House

Leek House - Fujimori Terunobu - Foso

The building below with the dead trunks growing through and the look of a medieval Japanese wooden fortress is the Akino Fuku Museum.

神長官/Jinchokan 01

More information on Fujimori below.

(more…)

Tetsu Teahouse in Japan, by Terunobu Fujimori

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009

teahouse by Terunobu Fujimori at the Kyoharu Geijutu Mura in Yamanashi Prefecture

Minimalism and fantasy, together. The interior of this teahouse is simple and modern, while the fantastical exterior looks like something from a Hiyao Miyazaki film. The interior view of the sliding wooden doors or shutters is just beautiful. The building is a Japanese teahouse by Terunobu Fujimori, who represented Japan at the Venice Biennale, in Yamanashi Prefecture. The photographs are by Dana + Leroy. The hatch in the floor is the entrance.

Teahouse by Terunobu Fujimori at the Kyoharu Geijutu Mura in Yamanashi Prefecture

Click below for more photos of the Tetsu Teahouse and the similar “Too High Teahouse.”

(more…)