Capsule A1305 from the Nakagin Capsule Tower Building, Tokyo, Japan

Capsule A1305 from the Nakagin Capsule Tower Building, Tokyo, Japan

Kisho KurokawaWW-1970-M128027
1970·Steel, wood, paint, plastics, cloth, polyurethane, glass, ceramic, and electronics·100 3/8 × 106 5/16 × 166 9/16" (255 × 270 × 423 cm)

Catalogue

Year
1970
Dimensions
100 3/8 × 106 5/16 × 166 9/16" (255 × 270 × 423 cm)

Artist

Kisho Kurokawa
Kisho Kurokawa

Drawing

Kisho Kurokawa was a Japanese architect and theorist whose designs synthesized organic forms with technological innovation, pioneering what he termed the Metabolism movement in the 1960s. His practice ranged from residential capsule architecture and civic structures to conceptual urban proposals that rejected rigid functionalism in favor of adaptability and renewal. Kurokawa's work combined biomimetic principles, prefabrication, and philosophical inquiry into the relationship between human habitation and natural systems. His influence on postwar Japanese architecture and design theory extended globally through both built projects and extensive writings on urbanism and temporality.

Nagoya, Aichi, Japan

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1961 · Ink and graphite on printed map

WW-1961-M000439
Helix City Project, Tokyo, Japan (Plan)

Helix City Project, Tokyo, Japan (Plan)

1961 · Cut-and-pasted gelatin silver photographs and ink on cut-and-pasted tracing paper on paper

WW-1961-M000438

Record

Verified by WattsOS
Year
1970
Dimensions
100 3/8 × 106 5/16 × 166 9/16" (255 × 270 × 423 cm)
Watts ID
WW-1970-M128027

Source

Source
moma
Status
verified

Artist

Kisho Kurokawa

Kisho Kurokawa

Drawing

View artist profile →