Referat Ming Pei
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Ieoh Ming PeiÂÂ
1983 Laureate
Ieoh Ming Pei is a founding partner of I. M. Pei & Partners, since
evolved to Pei Cobb Freed & Partners, based in New York City. He was
born in China in 1917. He come to the United States in 1935 to study
architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (B. Arch.
1940) and the Harvard Graduate School of Design (M. Arch. 1946). In
1948, he accepted the newly created post of Director of Architecture at
Webb & Knapp, Inc., the real estate development firm, and this
association resulted in major architectural and planning projects in
Chicago, Philadelphia, Washington, Pittsburgh and other cities. In 1958,
he formed the partnership of I. M. Pei & Associates, which become I.M.
Pei & Partners in 1966. The partnership received the 1968 Architectural
Firm Award of The American Institute of Architects.ÂÂ
Pei has designed over fifty projects in this country and abroad, many of
which have been award winners. His more prominent commissions have
included the East Building of the National Gallery of Art, Washington,
D.C.; Le Grand Louvre in Paris, France; the Bank of China in Hong Kong;
the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Library near Boston; the National Center for
Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado; the Dallas City Hall in Texas;
The Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center in Dallas, Texas; the Society
Hill development in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; the Overseas Chinese
Banking Corporation Centre (OCBC) and Raffles City in Singapore; the
West Wing of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the Fragrant Hill Hotel
near Beijing, China; Creative Artists Agency Headquarters in Beverly
Hills, California; the Jacob K. Javits Center in New York; an IBM Office
Complex in Somers, NY and another in Purchase, NY; the Everson Museum of
Art, Syracuse, New York; and the Texas Commerce Tower in Houston.ÂÂ
He has designed arts facilities and university buildings on the campuses
of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of
Rochester, Cornell University, the Choate School, Syracuse University,
New York University and the University of Hawaii.ÂÂ
As a student, he was awarded the MIT Traveling Fellowship, and the
Wheelwright Traveling Fellowship at Harvard. His subsequent honors
include the following: the Brunner Award,the Medal of Honor of the New
York Chapter of the AIA, the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Medal for
Architecture, the Gold Medal for Architecture of the American Academy of
Arts and Letters, the Alpha Rho Chi Gold Medal, la Grande Medaille d Or
of l Academie d Architecture (France), and The Gold Medal of The
American Institute of Architects. In 1982, the deans of the
architectural schools of the United States chose 1. M. Pei as the best
designer of significant non-residential structures.ÂÂ
Citation from the Pritzker JuryÂÂ
Ieoh Ming Pei has given this century some of its most beautiful interior
spaces and exterior forms. Yet the significance of his work goes far
beyond that. His concern has always been the surroundings in which his
buildings rise.ÂÂ
He has refused to limit himself to a narrow range of architectural
problems. His work over the past forty years includes not only palaces
of industry, government and culture, but also moderate and low income
housing. His versatility and skill in the use of materials approach the
level of poetry.ÂÂ
His tact and patience have enabled him to draw together peoples of
disparate interests and disciplines to create an harmonious
environment.ÂÂ
Ieoh Ming Pei s Acceptance Speech
It is a geat honor to be here tonight to receive the 1983 International
Pritzker Architecture Prize. I take particular pleasure in thanking
those who coneived the prize, those who have administered it, and the
distinguished jurors who have seen fit to select me as this year s
recipient.ÂÂ
During the preparation of the exhibits here, it was reassuring to
observe that quite a number of our projects actually led to finished
buildings. Especially vivid in my mind were the many social, economic,
political as well as esthetic constraints that architects have had to
consider in the shaping of their work. You may be amused to know,
although it was not amusing to me at the time, that a house I designed
for a friend in Cambridge in the early forties was denied a mortgage
because it looked modern. In this sense I belong to that generation of
American architects who built upon the pioneering perceptions of the
modern movement, with an unwavering conviction in its significant
achievements in the fields of art, technology and design. I am keenly
aware of the many banalities built in its name over the years.
Nevertheless, I believe in the continuity of this tradition for it is by
no means a relic of the past but a living force that animates and
informs the present.ÂÂ
Only in this way can we develop and refine an architectural language,
responsive to today s values and allow for a variety of expressions in
both style and substance. How else can we hope to build a coherent
physical environment for our cities, towns and neighborhoods?ÂÂ
Italy s Siena and America s Savannah, Georgian London and Neoclassical
Paris are but of few of the more conspicuous examples. I believe that
architecture is a pragmatic art. To become art it must be built on a
foundation of necessity. Freedom of expression, for me, consists in
moving within a measured range that I assign to each of my undertakings.
How instructive it is to remember Leonardo da Vinci s counsel that
"strength is born of constraint and dies in freedom."ÂÂ
The chase for the new, from the singular perspective of style, has too
often resulted in only the arbitrariness of whim, the disorder of
caprice. It is easy to say that the art of architecture is everything,
but how difficult it is to introduce the conscious intervention of an
artistic imagination without straying from the context of life.ÂÂ
It is this fragility, this preciousness, that elevates and distinguishes
this art form. It is this enfolding context that challenges us to
transform planning and building opportuniites into the exalted realm of
architecture. Architects by design investigate the play of volumes in
light, explore the mysteries of movement in space, examine the measure
that is scale and proportion, and above all, they search for that
special quality that is the spirit of the place as no building exists
alone.ÂÂ
The practice of architecture is a collective enterprise, with many
individuals of various disciplines and talents working closely together.
And from the commissioning to the completion of a project, there are
also the many individuals for whom architects work, whose contribution
to quality is frequently as crucial as that of the architect. So I
accept this prize for all who have worked with me in this unique
undertaking. Let us all be attentive to new ideas, to advancing means,
to dawning needs, to impetuses of change so that we may achieve, beyond
architectural originality, a harmony of spirit in the service of man.ÂÂ
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