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Shigeru Ban
Matilda McQuaid, with a foreword by Frei Otto
Das Buch:
Shigeru Ban (b. 1957), based in Japan, is a rising star
among world-class architects.
Based in Japan and one of an emerging generation of
young, world-class architects, Shigeru Ban (b.1957)
designs and builds graceful, serene structures using
modest and experimental materials such as cardboard, paper
tubes, bamboo and prefabricated wood. His buildings are
sometimes soaring and birdlike, sometimes simple,
grounded, and evocative of the Japanese aesthetic, but
always harmoniously integrated with, and respectful of,
their surrounding environments.
Ban has designed projects at both ends of the client
spectrum: from one-room temporary houses made of paper
tubes for earthquake refugees worldwide to a 14,000
square-foot country house in Sharon, Connecticut, his
first US commission. His humanitarian efforts and his
interest in recyclable, affordable, natural materials have
won praise and attention from museums and critics in
America and Europe. Ban's 'Curtain Wall House' was a
favourite entry in the Museum of Modern Art's 'Un-Private
House' exhibition in 1999. He has gone on to design a
museum for children in Japan, a canal museum in France,
and a private art museum in Belgium. He was included in
the 2000 and 2002 Venice Biennales, and created the Japan
Pavilion for Expo 2000 in Hanover, Germany. He was a
member of the Think team of architects selected in
February 2003 as one of two final teams to compete for the
commission to design the new World Trade Center site in
New York.
This monograph is only the second book on Ban in print
and, unlike the first publication, it is impressively
up-to-the-minute and exhaustive. Designed in Japan and in
collaboration with Ban himself, Shigeru Ban is divided
into sections that reflect with sensitivity the
architect's approach to materials, and presents 32 entire
projects - all of which are illustrated with colour
photographs, plans and sketches.
Der Autor:
Matilda McQuaid is Exhibitions Curator and Head of the
Textiles Department at the Cooper-Hewitt National Design
Museum in New York, and until 2001, was Associate Curator
in the Department of Architecture and Design at the Museum
of Modern Art, New York. She is the author of numerous
essays on architecture, textiles and fibre art in journals
and museum publications, including a contribution to
Envisioning Architecture: Drawings from the Museum of
Modern Art (Museum of Modern Art, 2002), which she also
edited.
Frei Otto is an eminent architect based in Germany, who
has pioneered research in lightweight membranes and
innovative structures. He founded the Development Centre
for Lightweight Construction in Berlin in 1957, which
later became the Institute for Lightweight Structures in
Stuttgart. He collaborated with Shigeru Ban on the Japan
Pavilion for Expo 2000 in Hanover, Germany.
Phaidon Verlag, Paperback 250 x 290 mm, 9 7/8 x 11 3/8 in
240 pp 200 colour illustrations 85 black and white
illustrations 150 line drawings.
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