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  • 00:00

    How do you emphasize nothingness in a building.

  • 00:08

    How do you design complex spatial circulation while maintaining the appearance of simplicity.

  • 00:16

    How do you become an architect, when you never get a day of conventional architectural education.

  • 00:24

    The answer perhaps lies in knowing the life of one of the most celebrated architects of

  • 00:30

    the 21st century.

  • 00:33

    Welcome to Blessedarch and today we are looking at the life and designs of Tadao Ando.

  • 00:47

    Vincent Scully, who was an American art historian, writer and architect, defined architecture

  • 00:53

    as a continued dialogue between generations, which creates an environment across time.

  • 00:58

    If you go by this definition, then every architect who has ever built a building has added to

  • 01:05

    this dialogue.

  • 01:06

    And while different architects take up different approaches creating buildings that have loud

  • 01:10

    and bold statements, the works of Tadao Ando seem to master the art of silence.

  • 01:17

    When you move through a space designed by Tadao Ando, you are made to experience simplicity.

  • 01:25

    Tadao Ando has mastered the art of creating spaces that dare I say force you to be meditative

  • 01:32

    & be present.

  • 01:33

    But this world famous Pritzker winning architect, did not have a conventional entry into the

  • 01:37

    field of architecture and maybe that’s because his whole life has been very unconventional.

  • 01:43

    To understand Tadao Ando’s work, we need to understand where he comes from.

  • 01:49

    His story began in 1941 in Osaka Japan.

  • 01:58

    Tadao Ando was born along with his twin brother Takao Kitayama.

  • 02:03

    At an early age, his family chose to separate them, and have Tadao live with his great grandmother.

  • 02:10

    So this was around 1943, when the world war 2 was in full momentum.

  • 02:17

    And in 1945 it happened.

  • 02:21

    When he was 4 years old, two bombs were dropped in Japan.

  • 02:29

    We all know the story of the devastation that it caused.

  • 02:33

    And so Tadao Ando spent his early years in a Japan that was recovering from these bombings

  • 02:39

    and trying to build itself back up.

  • 02:44

    While he lived with his grandmother, just across from his house was the shop of a carpenter.

  • 02:49

    A young Tadao spent a lot of time at this shop learning how to use and model from wood.

  • 02:55

    His first introduction to architecture was at the age of 15 when he picked up a book

  • 03:01

    by Le Corbusier.

  • 03:03

    Ever since his childhood and even to this day, Books have held a great significance

  • 03:08

    in his life.

  • 03:10

    His hunger for knowledge was so ravenous that to save for books he cut out a meal each day

  • 03:16

    to afford them.

  • 03:19

    Even though there was a spark of architecture within him, he still had a long way to go,

  • 03:24

    before he actually became an architect.

  • 03:30

    So as he approached adulthood, Tadao had a lot of off beat jobs.

  • 03:35

    One of them was a boxer.

  • 03:37

    But even his profession as a boxer was taken to serve his true calling.

  • 03:42

    He said in an interview with Tatler that to be the best architect “It’s vital for

  • 03:47

    one to take in a lot of scenery – travelling makes an architect.

  • 03:52

    I became a boxer because the matches allowed me to travel overseas and experience different

  • 03:57

    architectural styles.”

  • 03:59

    When Tadao was about 18, he started to visit temples, shrines, and tea houses in Kyoto

  • 04:05

    and Nara.

  • 04:07

    His architectural education did not happen in classrooms but in the actual spaces he

  • 04:12

    visited.

  • 04:13

    He kept detailed sketch books of all his travels which he still does to this day.

  • 04:20

    One of the biggest qualities that sets him apart in the world of architecture, is he

  • 04:24

    spent a lot of his time learning not from the masters of architecture, but from their

  • 04:32

    creations.

  • 04:33

    Two of the biggest people to influence him deeply were Le Corbusier and Frank Lloyd Wright.

  • 04:40

    In fact Tadao finally decided to leave boxing and pursue architecture when he saw the Imperial

  • 04:45

    Hotel in Tokyo built by Frank Lloyd Wright.

  • 04:49

    This hotel, which is no longer standing, was completed in 1923 with the aim to showcase

  • 04:55

    Japan's modernity and entice western visitors.

  • 04:59

    As Ando puts it ‘I was overwhelmed by the immense beauty and richness of the space.

  • 05:05

    My response to the building was a purely emotional one as I had no knowledge of the technical

  • 05:11

    and cultural complexities of architecture.

  • 05:14

    I was shocked yet intrigued to know that architecture could induce a feeling akin to exploring a

  • 05:21

    whole new world.’

  • 05:22

    He eventually decided to end his boxing career less than two years after graduating from

  • 05:28

    high school to pursue architecture.

  • 05:31

    After this he then attended night classes to learn drawing and took correspondence courses

  • 05:36

    on interior design.

  • 05:38

    He visited buildings designed by renowned architects like Le Corbusier, Mies van der

  • 05:42

    Rohe, and Louis Kahn and finally in 1969, he was confident enough in the self-taught

  • 05:49

    skills that he opened his one-man design studio, Tadao Ando Architect & Associates.

  • 06:02

    A lot of his early works were a series of houses.

  • 06:05

    The most significant of these houses was Azuma house in Osaka (1976).

  • 06:12

    This two-story dwelling was conceived as a megaron inserted within a row of traditional

  • 06:17

    terrace houses.

  • 06:18

    In this early project itself Tadao already established the essential principles of his

  • 06:24

    architecture; the basic concept of creating meditative enclosures to stand against the

  • 06:31

    urban chaos of the world.

  • 06:33

    This is a theme that you will see repeating in all of Tadao Ando’s work . As he puts

  • 06:38

    it “I create enclosed spaces mainly by means of thick concrete walls.

  • 06:44

    The primary reason is to create a place for the individual, a zone for oneself within

  • 06:49

    society.

  • 06:51

    When the external factors of a city’s environment require the wall to be without openings, the

  • 06:57

    interior must be especially full and satisfying.”Coming back to the Azuma House, It consists of three

  • 07:04

    equal rectangular volumes: two enclosed volumes of interior spaces separated by an open courtyard.

  • 07:12

    The courtyard's position between the two interior volumes becomes an integral part of the house's

  • 07:18

    circulation system.

  • 07:19

    This house was one of the early works by Tadao Ando that won many awards in Japan and springboarded

  • 07:26

    him into international acclaim.

  • 07:29

    In much of Andos’ work you will see a deep understanding of the site.

  • 07:34

    A project that perfectly encapsulates is the Rokko Housing.

  • 07:40

    Built of reinforced concrete with a rigid frame, the units are embedded in the side

  • 07:49

    of sixty degree sloping hillside with a panoramic view of Osaka Bay, and provide such amenities

  • 07:55

    as a swimming pool and a rooftop plaza.

  • 07:59

    Ando received Japan's Cultural Design Prize in 1983 for this project.

  • 08:05

    But more significantly, was Ando's noteworthy engineering achievement in these clustered

  • 08:11

    buildings.

  • 08:12

    These structures survived undamaged after the Great Hanshin earthquake of 1995.

  • 08:19

    And this is the true testament to Ando’s education of learning by observation.

  • 08:26

    In his travels and in his yearning to take in the buildings around him, he saw the relationship

  • 08:31

    that buildings have with the air, the light, even with the ground that they stand on.

  • 08:37

    And in understanding these relationships and harnessing them to create beautiful spaces

  • 08:43

    is where the true beauty of his works lie.

  • 08:47

    One of the biggest natural resources that he beautifully harnesses in his designs is

  • 08:52

    natural light.

  • 08:54

    He intends for people to easily experience the spirit and beauty of nature through architecture.

  • 09:01

    One of my favourite structures by Tadao Ando is the Church of the light.

  • 09:05

    Now Ando has deep Japanese roots and even though Japanese and Christian churches display

  • 09:11

    distinct characteristics, Ando treats them in a similar way.

  • 09:17

    In the small town of Ibaraki, 25km outside of Osaka, Japan, stands the Church of the

  • 09:24

    Light.

  • 09:25

    Completed in 1989, the Church of the Light was a renovation to an existing Christian

  • 09:30

    compound in Ibaraki.

  • 09:32

    The structure is a minimalist concrete structure with slits in the wall in the shape of a cross.

  • 09:38

    When daylight hits the outside of this wall, a cross of light is generated within the interior.

  • 09:45

    As you sit in the space, and light shines through the cross, it is as if you get a glimpse

  • 09:51

    into the divine.

  • 09:53

    Tadao went to create more and more beautiful structures.

  • 09:58

    As his reputation spread, Andō received a number of commissions outside Japan that allowed

  • 10:04

    him to continue his aesthetic in more-public spaces.

  • 10:08

    Important works from the 1990s include the Ando Gallery at the Art Institute of Chicago

  • 10:11

    ; the Japanese Pavilion at Expo ’92 in Sevilla, Spain; and the UNESCO Meditation Space in

  • 10:19

    Paris.

  • 10:20

    He continued to design large-scale projects in the 21st century.

  • 10:24

    Like the Giorgio Armani Theatre in Milan; the Pulitzer Arts Foundation in St. Louis,

  • 10:30

    Missouri; the Modern Art Museum in Fort Worth, Texas; and the Chichu Art Museum Naoshima,

  • 10:36

    Japan.

  • 10:38

    One of the greatest things that you will find in Tadao’s Ando’s work is the use walls.

  • 10:43

    You might be a little taken aback by this statement.

  • 10:46

    Did I really just say walls?

  • 10:48

    We have them all around us, they are basic building blocks of any space, how are Tadao’s

  • 10:55

    Ando’s walls any different?

  • 10:56

    The significance is not just the element itself, but how it is used.

  • 11:02

    As he puts it “At times walls manifest a power that borders on the violent.

  • 11:08

    They have the power to divide space, transfigure place, and create new domains.

  • 11:13

    Walls are the most basic elements of architecture, but they can also be the most enriching.”

  • 11:20

    Ando’s work stives to create sensory experiences and that is where his walls are important.

  • 11:27

    They are the words that he uses, to finally string together his beautiful poems.

  • 11:35

    Btw Ando doesn’t just focus on the form of his buildings, he even works tirelessly

  • 11:41

    to perfect the material.

  • 11:43

    His concrete is often referred to as “smooth-as-silk.”

  • 11:48

    But its not just about whats in the concrete, but about how it is poured and the form work

  • 11:53

    surrounding it.

  • 11:54

    His form molds, or wooden shuttering are even varnished to achieve smooth-as-silk finish

  • 12:00

    to the concrete.

  • 12:03

    The evenly spaced holes in the concrete, that have become almost an Ando trademark, are

  • 12:08

    the result of bolts that hold the shuttering together.

  • 12:11

    When he was being given his Pritzker prize in 1995, the jury cited, "Ando conceives his

  • 12:18

    projects as places of habitation not as abstract designs in a landscape.

  • 12:24

    It is not surprising that he is often referred to by his professional peers and critics as

  • 12:30

    being as much a builder as an architect.

  • 12:34

    That emphasizes how important he considers craftsmanship in accomplishing his designs.

  • 12:40

    He requires absolute precision in the making and casting of his concrete forms to achieve

  • 12:46

    the smooth, clean and perfect concrete for his structures."

  • 12:49

    When he won his Pritzker prize in 1995, He donated the $100,000 prize money to the orphans

  • 13:02

    of the 1995 Kobe earthquake.

  • 13:05

    To me it seems Tadao understands that the central idea in all his work is very human

  • 13:11

    centric.

  • 13:12

    Even in his structures it is not just about the end users and their experiences, it is

  • 13:17

    about the people who bring his work to life.

  • 13:21

    In an interview he once talked about going on the site he said, ‘An architect needs

  • 13:26

    to make everyone take ownership for the work.

  • 13:30

    To be successful, you need to ensure that every carpenter, plumber, and so on, in every

  • 13:36

    project, is doing their own project.

  • 13:39

    Every time I go to the construction site, I try to take a photograph of every worker.

  • 13:44

    It's a symbol that we're all working together with a shared goal.

  • 13:49

    It's very important for me that everyone feels that way.’

  • 13:59

    Tadao Ando today is 80 years old and has created a Legacy that very few come close to.

  • 14:06

    Remember the quote Vincent Scully, who defined architecture as a continued dialogue between

  • 14:12

    generations?

  • 14:14

    Well in these dialogues, Tadao Ando has contributed some of the most brilliant poems, frozen in

  • 14:22

    form.

All

The example sentences of PRIZE in videos (15 in total of 440)

when wh-adverb he personal pronoun won verb, past tense his possessive pronoun pritzker proper noun, singular prize noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction 1995 cardinal number , he personal pronoun donated verb, past tense the determiner $ proper noun, singular 100,000 cardinal number prize noun, singular or mass money noun, singular or mass to to the determiner orphans noun, plural
rolf proper noun, singular fehlbaum proper noun, singular & coordinating conjunction frank proper noun, singular gehry proper noun, singular among preposition or subordinating conjunction other adjective names noun, plural , richard proper noun, singular rogers proper noun, singular was verb, past tense awarded verb, past participle the determiner pritzker proper noun, singular prize proper noun, singular .
this determiner nobel proper noun, singular prize proper noun, singular comes verb, 3rd person singular present with preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner monetary adjective prize noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction eight cardinal number million cardinal number swedish proper noun, singular krona proper noun, singular which wh-determiner is verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner
an determiner answer noun, singular or mass , let verb, base form me personal pronoun know verb, non-3rd person singular present proper noun, singular because preposition or subordinating conjunction there existential there is verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner nobel proper noun, singular prize noun, singular or mass waiting verb, gerund or present participle for preposition or subordinating conjunction you personal pronoun .
it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present in preposition or subordinating conjunction whose possessive wh-pronoun you personal pronoun are verb, non-3rd person singular present you personal pronoun know verb, non-3rd person singular present what wh-pronoun the determiner ultimate adjective prize noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present the determiner highest adjective, superlative prize noun, singular or mass
the determiner prize noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction obtain verb, base form it personal pronoun it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present not adverb just adverb that preposition or subordinating conjunction forward adverb movement noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction going verb, gerund or present participle for preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner prize noun, singular or mass but coordinating conjunction you personal pronoun guys noun, plural
initiated verb, past participle by preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner offer noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner $ proper noun, singular 10,000 cardinal number prize noun, singular or mass by preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner australian proper noun, singular government noun, singular or mass , the determiner prize noun, singular or mass was verb, past tense to to be verb, base form awarded verb, past participle
it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present that determiner mindset noun, singular or mass that preposition or subordinating conjunction you personal pronoun are verb, non-3rd person singular present the determiner prize noun, singular or mass yes interjection she personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present the determiner prize noun, singular or mass - of preposition or subordinating conjunction course noun, singular or mass it personal pronoun
the determiner grand adjective prize noun, singular or mass at preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner end noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner season noun, singular or mass , where wh-adverb cameron proper noun, singular actually adverb splits verb, 3rd person singular present the determiner prize noun, singular or mass thirteen noun, singular or mass ways noun, plural .
well adverb , if preposition or subordinating conjunction you personal pronoun back adverb a determiner prize noun, singular or mass institute noun, singular or mass that preposition or subordinating conjunction runs verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner 10 cardinal number prize noun, singular or mass , you personal pronoun get verb, non-3rd person singular present 500 cardinal number to to one cardinal number .
a determiner prize noun, singular or mass , and coordinating conjunction the determiner chance noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction getting verb, gerund or present participle a determiner cash noun, singular or mass prize noun, singular or mass are verb, non-3rd person singular present even adverb slimmer noun, singular or mass at preposition or subordinating conjunction 1 cardinal number in preposition or subordinating conjunction 8.94 cardinal number .
they personal pronoun they personal pronoun wanted verb, past tense to to see verb, base form what wh-determiner dad noun, singular or mass got verb, past tense do verb, non-3rd person singular present n't adverb look verb, base form at preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner prize noun, singular or mass i personal pronoun looked verb, past tense at preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner prize noun, singular or mass what wh-pronoun in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner world noun, singular or mass
so adverb again adverb with preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner prize noun, singular or mass , i personal pronoun think verb, non-3rd person singular present you personal pronoun should modal make verb, base form the determiner prize noun, singular or mass something noun, singular or mass that wh-determiner is verb, 3rd person singular present actually adverb
close verb, base form hurry verb, base form it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present right adverb here adverb finish verb, base form line noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present right adverb here adverb you personal pronoun can modal make verb, base form it personal pronoun for preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner prize noun, singular or mass for preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner prize noun, singular or mass
prize proper noun, singular , making verb, gerund or present participle her possessive pronoun the determiner only adverb nobel proper noun, singular prize proper noun, singular winner noun, singular or mass who wh-pronoun is verb, 3rd person singular present the determiner mother noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner nobel proper noun, singular prize proper noun, singular winner noun, singular or mass ?

Use "prize" in a sentence | "prize" example sentences

How to use "prize" in a sentence?

  • I am very proud. It is always fun to win such a prize, to be chosen as Swedens best player a certain year.
    -Zlatan Ibrahimovic-
  • Competing is exciting and winning is exhilarating, but the true prize will always be the self-knowledge and understanding that you have gained along the way.
    -Sebastian Coe-
  • She’s the kind of person who either dies tragically at twenty-seven, like Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin, or else grows up to win, like, the first-ever Nobel Prize for Awesome.
    -John Green-
  • Far and away the best prize that life has to offer is the chance to work hard at work worth doing.
    -Theodore Roosevelt-
  • He, that noble prize possessing He that boasts a friend that's true, He whom woman's love is blessing, Let him join the chorus too!
    -Friedrich Schiller-
  • Enjoy the peace your valor won. Let independence be our boast, Ever mindful what it cost; Ever grateful for the prize, Let its altar reach the skies!
    -Joseph Hopkinson-
  • The greater the artist, the greater the doubt; perfect confidence is granted to the less talented as a consolation prize.
    -Robert Hughes-
  • Winning the prize wasn't half as exciting as doing the work itself.
    -Maria Goeppert-Mayer-

Definition and meaning of PRIZE

What does "prize mean?"

/prīz/

adjective
having been awarded prize.
noun
reward given to winner.
verb
To value greatly and consider it important.

What are synonyms of "prize"?
Some common synonyms of "prize" are:
  • award,
  • reward,
  • premium,
  • trophy,
  • cup,
  • medal,
  • plate,
  • shield,
  • honor,
  • accolade,
  • crown,
  • laurels,
  • bays,
  • palm,
  • jackpot,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.