Yoshio Taniguchi (Gu Kou Ji Sheng , Taniguchi Yoshio; born 1937) is a Japanese architect best known for his redesign of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, which was reopened November 20, 2004. Critics have emphasized Taniguchi’s fusion of traditional Japanese and Modernist aesthetics. Martin Filler, writing in The New York Times, praised “the luminous physicality and calm aura of Taniguchi’s buildings,” noting that the architect “sets his work apart by exploiting the traditional Japanese strategies of clarity, understatement, opposition, asymmetry and proportion.” “In an era of glamorously expressionist architecture,” wrote Time critic Richard Lacayo, MoMA “has opted for a work of what you might call old-fashioned Modernism, clean-lined and rectilinear, a subtly updated version of the glass-and-steel box that the museum first championed in the 1930s, years before that style was adopted for corporate headquarters everywhere.”
Yoshio Taniguchi
Japanese Architect
About Yoshio Taniguchi
Get to know Yoshio Taniguchi better
Frequently asked questions about Yoshio Taniguchi
No FAQ for this author.
Quotes by Yoshio Taniguchi
Architecture is basically a container of something. I hope they will enjoy not so much the teacup, but the tea.
Yoshio Taniguchi
When a project has an ample budget, I am interested now in using bigger units of materials.
Yoshio Taniguchi
When drawings of the main buildings I have designed in the last five years are juxtaposed, the fact that they all involve the pursuit of certain configurations is obvious to anyone.
Yoshio Taniguchi