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ARCHITECTURE FOR HUMANS: JUNZO SAKAKURA
MAISON DE LA CULTURE DU JAPON À PARIS, PARIS (FRANCE)
26 APRIL – 08 JULY 2017
The exhibition Architecture for Humans: Junzo Sakakura presented in Paris in July 2017 offered an intimate look into the work of one of Japan’s most significant modernist architects. Having trained under Le Corbusier in the 1930s, Sakakura developed an architectural language that merged the clarity of European modernism with a distinctly human-centered sensibility. The exhibition brought together historical documentation, photographs, and models, including a reconstruction of his celebrated 1937 Japanese Pavilion for the Paris International Exposition—displayed alongside the Pavillon des Temps Nouveaux designed by Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret.
Through archival drawings, furniture, and rare images, the exhibition highlighted Sakakura’s commitment to creating architecture that balanced technical rigor with comfort, functionality, and understated elegance. His chairs—quiet, modest, and refined—embodied the same ethos as his buildings: pieces that age gracefully, revealing a design language that transcends time. By situating Sakakura within the broader modernist context while emphasizing his unique sensibility, the exhibition portrayed a designer whose work remains strikingly relevant today.
Among the most compelling elements of the exhibition was the display of Sakakura’s furniture, which allowed viewers to appreciate both the refinement and practicality embedded in his designs. Chairs with modest silhouettes and subtle curves—such as adjustable-back seats and elegantly shaped armrests—revealed the meticulous attention Sakakura brought to ergonomics and craftsmanship. These pieces demonstrated how his modernist ideals extended seamlessly from architecture to the scale of the human body.
The models and photographs of the 1937 Japanese Pavilion further contextualized this sensibility, illustrating how Sakakura fused the structural clarity of modernism with a serene, distinctly Japanese spatial logic. The pavilion, built on the Trocadéro grounds, echoed the language of Le Corbusier while maintaining its own identity—an embodiment of cultural dialogue and architectural experimentation.
Together, these materials underscored Sakakura’s belief that architecture should return to the scale of the individual, privileging comfort, clarity, and usability. The exhibition affirmed his enduring relevance and the quiet strength of a design philosophy devoted to the human experience.