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  1. Kunio Maekawa (前川 國男, Maekawa Kunio, 14 May 1905 – 26 June 1986) was a Japanese architect and a key figure in Japanese postwar modernism. After early stints in the studios of Le Corbusier and Antonin Raymond, Maekawa began to articulate his own architectural language after establishing his own firm in 1935, maintaining a ...

  2. Kunio Maekawa (前川 國男, Maekawa Kunio?, 14 de maio de 1905 — 26 de junho de 1986) foi um arquiteto japonês. Biografia. Nascido em Niigata, Maekawa entrou para a Universidade de Tóquio em 1925. Depois de se graduar, em 1928, ele partiu para a França, onde se tornou aprendiz de Le Corbusier.

  3. 10 de mai. de 2024 · Maekawa Kunio (born May 14, 1905, Niigata-shi, Japan—died June 27, 1986, Tokyo) was a Japanese architect noted for his designs of community centres and his work in concrete. After graduation from Tokyo University in 1928, Maekawa studied with the architect Le Corbusier in Paris for two years.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. 8 de ago. de 2016 · Kunio Maekawa is one of the most influential Japanese modernist architects who studied in France to apprentice for Le Corbusier and later designed the Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum during the 60s. His original house has been dismantled and relocated to the Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum.

  5. Their names — Junzo Sakakura, Takamasa Yoshizaka and, above all, Kunio Maekawa — would become hallowed in the emerging pantheon of Japanese Modernists. They had trained with Le Corbusier in...

  6. 15 de jan. de 2014 · Kunio Maekawa (Niigata, 14 de maio de 1905 – 26 de junho de 1986), arquiteto japonês de projeção internacional, discípulo de Le Corbusier. Nascido em Niigata, Maekawa entrou para a Universidade de Tóquio em 1925.

  7. 29 de set. de 2016 · Kunio Maekawa was one of the masters of architecture of the post-World War II period and is considered the father of the new Japanese architecture. He studied architecture at the University of Tokyo, after getting his graduate degree in 1928, he traveled to Paris to work with Le Corbusier where he remained until 1930.