Katsura : imperial villa / Arata Isozaki ... [et al.] ; edited by Virginia
Ponciroli.
Phaidon
Press, London [etc.] : 2011.
396 p. : il., planos
ISBN 9780714862545
Materias:
Biblioteca Sbc Aprendizaje A-728.8(52)
KAT
OPAC MillennuiumA comprehensive and beautifully illustrated study of the Katsura Imperial Villa, Japan, considered the most outstanding example of 17th century Japanese architecture and precursor of modern tendencies. Introduction by Arata Isozaki plus essays by Manfred Speidel, Bruno Taut, Walter Gropius, Kenzo Tange and Francesco Dal Co.
A detailed history of Katsura, the seventeenth-century Imperial Palace in Kyoto, Japan, a pivotal work of Japanese architecture, often described as the 'quintessence of Japanese taste'. First revealed to the modern architectural world by Bruno Taut, the great German architect, in the early twentieth-century, Katsura stunned and then excited the architectural community of the West. Le Corbusier and Walter Gropius, pillars of the Modernist establishment, were fascinated by Katsura's 'modernity'. This book documents the palace in detail, combining newly commissioned photographs, detailed drawings, archival material, and historical analysis.
- A comprehensive and beautifully illustrated study of the Katsura Imperial Villa, Japan, considered the most outstanding example of 17th century Japanese architecture and precursor of modern tendencies
- Includes a wealth of photographs, some specially commissioned for the title and others taken from archives, supported by detailed drawings and text from experts such as Walter Gropius and Bruno Taut
- An in-depth analysis of a complex that has long been a pilgrimage site for architects around the world, this is an indispensable reference work
Manfred Speidel (b.1938) graduated from the University of Stuttgart Department of Architecture in 1965 and is a leading authority on Bruno Taut.
Bruno Taut (1880–1938) was a German-born architect and theorist who visited Katsura in the 1930s and was one of the first to champion the complex as a precursor of modern architecture.
Walter Gropius (1883–1969) was chairman of Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design from 1937–52 and was a founder of the Bauhaus.
Kenzo Tange (1913–2005) was one of Japan’s foremost architects and was the winner of the 1987 Ptitzker Architecture Prize.
Francesco Dal Co (b.1945) is Professor of Architectural History at the University Institute of Architecture in Venice.
Links
Phaidon | Katsura : imperial villa
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