A1595

谷口吉生

| 1937-10-17 | 2024-12-16

TANIGUCHI Yoshio

| 1937-10-17 | 2024-12-16

Names
  • 谷口吉生
  • TANIGUCHI Yoshio (index name)
  • Taniguchi Yoshio (display name)
  • 谷口吉生 (Japanese display name)
  • たにぐち よしお (transliterated hiragana)
Date of birth
1937-10-17
Birth place
Tokyo
Date of death
2024-12-16
Gender
Male
Fields of activity
  • Architecture

Wikipedia

Yoshio Taniguchi (谷口 吉生, Taniguchi Yoshio; 17 October 1937 – 16 December 2024) was a Japanese architect best known for his redesign of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, which was reopened on 20 November 2004. Critics have emphasized Taniguchi's fusion of traditional Japanese and Modernist aesthetics. Martin Filler, writing in The New York Times, praised "the luminous physicality and calm aura of Taniguchi's buildings," noting that the architect "sets his work apart by exploiting the traditional Japanese strategies of clarity, understatement, opposition, asymmetry and proportion." "In an era of glamorously expressionist architecture," wrote Time critic Richard Lacayo, MoMA "has opted for a work of what you might call old-fashioned Modernism, clean-lined and rectilinear, a subtly updated version of the glass-and-steel box that the museum first championed in the 1930s, years before that style was adopted for corporate headquarters everywhere."

Information from Wikipedia, made available under theCreative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

VIAF ID
2643507
ULAN ID
500086067
AOW ID
_42166782
NDL ID
00557557
Wikidata ID
Q1396719
  • 2024-12-23