The house as a piece of nature. Three mechanisms of the contemporary Japanese architecture
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.26754/ojs_zarch/zarch.2021176039Keywords:
Contemporary Japanese architecture, Traditional Japanese architecture, Architecture and nature, Junya Ishigami, Sou Fujimoto, Ryue NishizawaAbstract
In traditional Japanese culture, the house cannot be understood without its connection with nature. That fact qualifies the configuration of the house as well as the symbolic value of certain construction elements. This is reflected, at the beginning of the 20th century, in the writings of some Western authors who visited the country, as well as in other Japanese authors, contrasting these highly appreciated qualities of the traditional house with the rapid and substantial changes that were taking place in Japanese culture and architecture. Throughout the 20th century, the adoption of Western techniques and languages and the search for a language of its own, led to the interest in the house and its relationship with nature to move away from the main architectural focus of attention. It will not be until the end of the 20th century and the beginning of the 21st that the importance of this relationship is once again claimed by various authors, who will place it at the center of the design concerns of some of their works. Somewhat, these attitudes may be influenced by the ideals present in tradition, but without an imitation of the referent. It will be through the generation of new project mechanisms, three of which we will collect in this text, that this search for a rapprochement between nature and architecture will be resumed.
Display downloads
References
Álvarez, Darío. 2007. El jardín en la arquitectura del siglo XX. Naturaleza artificial en la cultura moderna. Barcelona: Reverté.
Fujimori, Terunobu. 2007. Terunobu Fujimori Architecture. Tokyo: TOTO.
Fujimoto, Sou. 2012. Sou Fujimoto: Sketchbook. Zürich: Lars Müller.
_____. 2018. Sou Fujimoto. Architecture Works 1995-2015. Tokyo: TOTO publishing.
Gómez Carrillo, Enrique. 1912. El Japón heroico y galante. Madrid: Renacimiento.
Ishigami, Junya; Igarashi, Taro. 2010. Plants & architecture. Junya.ishigami+associates: Tokyo.
Ishigami, Junya. 2012. Junya Ishigami: small images. Tokyo: LIXIL publishing.
Molina, Santiago de. 2013. Múltiples estrategias de arquitectura. Madrid: Ediciones Asimétricas.
Monteys, Xavier. 2014. La habitación: más allá de la sala de estar. Barcelona: Gustavo Gili.
Nishizawa, Ryue. 2010. Office of Ryue Nishizawa detail series. Tokyo: Shokokusha.
Nuijsink, Cathelijne. 2012. How to make a Japanese house. Rotterdam: NAi Publishers.
Ontiveros, Ignacio; Pascuets, Joan Ramón, ed. 2014. Los arquitectos de la nada. Barcelona: Casa Asia.
Rodríguez Llera, Ramón. 2012. Japón en Occidente: arquitecturas y paisajes del imaginario japonés: del exotismo a la modernidad. Valladolid: Universidad de Valladolid.
Rodríguez Llera, Ramón; Rincón, Iván. 2020. Miradas cruzadas. Notas sobre arquitecturas nórdicas y arquitectos viajeros entre Japón y Europa. RITA 14 (noviembre): 102-9.
Stewart, David B. 1987. The making of a modern Japanese architecture: 1868 to the present. Tokyo: Kodansha International.
Taut, Bruno. 2007. La casa y la vida japonesas. Barcelona: Fundación Caja de Arquitectos.
Tschumi, Christian. 2007. Mirei Shigemori, rebel in the garden. Modern Japanese landscape architecture. Basel: Birkhäuser.
Yoshida, Tetsuro. 1955. The Japanese house and garden. London: The architectural press.
Revista 2G. Sou Fujimoto, nº 50. 2009. Barcelona: Gustavo Gili.
Revista 2G. Junya Ishigami, nº 78. 2019. Londres: Koenig Books.
Revista El Croquis. Sou Fujimoto 2003-2010, nº 151. 2010. El Escorial: El Croquis.
Revista El Croquis. SANAA Kazuyo Sejima Ryue Nishizawa 2011-2015, nº 179-180. 2015. El Escorial: El Croquis.
Revista El Croquis. Christian Kerez 2010-2015. Junya Ishigami 2005-2015, nº 182. 2015. El Escorial: El Croquis.
Revista JA. The Japan Architect. Living Together, nº 111, (otoño) 2018. Tokyo: The Japan Architect.