S T Y L E & D E S I G N
Japan's Bright Light
Architect Kazuyo Sejima wants to bring calm to cities around the globe. With a string of new projects, she's in demand
By Michiko Toyama
Monday, February 9, 2004
Throughout Japan's long economic funk, one street has stood firm
as a stronghold of the good old days: Tokyo's hip Omotesando
Avenue, where Gucci, Louis Vuitton and other name-brand boutiques
have multiplied as if the bubble had never burst. The gilded
strip recently got its most flamboyant address yet when Dior
opened its largest shop in the world there. But the store is
notable for more than the treasures for sale inside. The
ultramodern glass building, which resembles a fantastically
illuminated medieval castle, is also Omotesando's most striking
piece of architecture. Its creator, Kazuyo Sejima, 47, recalls
that Dior requested that the building be feminine, elegant and
intimate. With her partner, Ryue Nishizawa--with whom she runs
SANAA Ltd. (Sejima, Nishizawa & Associates)--Sejima carried out
the directive by drawing on a ball gown embellished with tulle
ribbons from Dior designer John Galliano's 1997 debut collection.
The building, with its beautifully structured drapes behind the
glass wall, is the ultimate version of Sejima's work.
In the world of Japanese architecture, Sejima is like Rei
Kawakubo of Comme des Garcons--an avant-garde talent with a keen
business sense. Her firm's awards include an Architectural
Institute of Japan prize and the Arnold W. Brunner prize from the
American Academy of Arts and Letters. She has been invited to
teach at Tokyo's Keio University and has won a string of
high-profile projects, including the design of a new home for New
York City's New Museum of Contemporary Art.
Sejima's success didn't come all at once. "I hardly won any
competitions for 10 years after I opened my firm," she confesses.
But today the petite Sejima--wearing minimal makeup and dressed
in a frilly black skirt and matching Comme des Garcons
loafers--is juggling 10 sizable projects and heading a team of 33
young designers, with whom she often works seven days a week.
First up is the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art in
Kanazawa, Japan, which opens in June. Next year will see the
completion of the Glass Pavilion at the Toledo Museum of Art in
Ohio and the Zollverein School of Management and Design in Essen,
Germany. The Zollverein School and the New Museum are set to open
in 2006.
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