-
Hong Kong SAR
Copyright © 2025 Powered by BCI Media Group Pty Ltd
No Result Found
Make sure all words are spelled correctly.
Try more general keywords.
Products
Notification
Select Country
About Zhaoyang Architects
In 2012, Zhao was selected as the inaugural architectural protégé of the acclaimed Rolex Mentor and Protégé Arts Initiative. Under the direction of his mentor Kazuyo Sejima, Zhao designed Home-for-All in Kesennuma to help victims of the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Zhao’s design works and interviews have been widely published. He is also invited to speak in Tshinghua University, Tongji University, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Tohoku University and Geoffrey Bawa memorial lecture, among other places. In 2015, Zhaoyang architects participated in the exhibition “From the Asian Everyday” at Toto gallery Ma in Tokyo. “The architectural works of Yang ZHAO, look modern and abstract, a vision of now, rather than an imitation of past forms, but deep beneath there is an underlying idea that is from the past, the idea of the order in the genus loci, the order of things in a place that give it form, movement, and rhythm. Yang ZHAO strives to knowing the raison d’etre in a place, and then expressing them as they are in the new form of now. The act is courageous and visionary, in sensitively and sensibly responding to the particular conditions of approaching making architecture in a fast changing China.”[1] [1] Erwin Viray, Introductory Essay, The Asian Everyday : Possibilities in the Shifting World , TOTO Publishing, 2015. Erwin Viray is a committee member of TOTO GALLERY・MA and professor of the Department of Design and Architecture in the Kyoto Institute of Technology School of Science and Technology.
In 2012, Zhao was selected as the inaugural architectural protégé of the acclaimed Rolex Mentor and Protégé Arts Initiative. Under the direction of his mentor Kazuyo Sejima, Zhao designed Home-for-All in Kesennuma to help victims of the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Zhao’s design works and interviews have been widely published. He is also invited to speak in Tshinghua University, Tongji University, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Tohoku University and Geoffrey Bawa memorial lecture, among other places. In 2015, Zhaoyang architects participated in the exhibition “From the Asian Everyday” at Toto gallery Ma in Tokyo. “The architectural works of Yang ZHAO, look modern and abstract, a vision of now, rather than an imitation of past forms, but deep beneath there is an underlying idea that is from the past, the idea of the order in the genus loci, the order of things in a place that give it form, movement, and rhythm. Yang ZHAO strives to knowing the raison d’etre in a place, and then expressing them as they are in the new form of now. The act is courageous and visionary, in sensitively and sensibly responding to the particular conditions of approaching making architecture in a fast changing China.”[1] [1] Erwin Viray, Introductory Essay, The Asian Everyday : Possibilities in the Shifting World , TOTO Publishing, 2015. Erwin Viray is a committee member of TOTO GALLERY・MA and professor of the Department of Design and Architecture in the Kyoto Institute of Technology School of Science and Technology.
In 2012, Zhao was selected as the inaugural architectural protégé of the acclaimed Rolex Mentor and Protégé Arts Initiative. Under the direction of his mentor Kazuyo Sejima, Zhao designed Home-for-All in Kesennuma to help victims of the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan.
Zhao’s design works and interviews have been widely published. He is also invited to speak in Tshinghua University, Tongji University, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Tohoku University and Geoffrey Bawa memorial lecture, among other places. In 2015, Zhaoyang architects participated in the exhibition “From the Asian Everyday” at Toto gallery Ma in Tokyo.
“The architectural works of Yang ZHAO, look modern and abstract, a vision of now, rather than an imitation of past forms, but deep beneath there is an underlying idea that is from the past, the idea of the order in the genus loci, the order of things in a place that give it form, movement, and rhythm. Yang ZHAO strives to knowing the raison d’etre in a place, and then expressing them as they are in the new form of now. The act is courageous and visionary, in sensitively and sensibly responding to the particular conditions of approaching making architecture in a fast changing China.”[1]
[1] Erwin Viray, Introductory Essay, The Asian Everyday : Possibilities in the Shifting World, TOTO Publishing, 2015. Erwin Viray is a committee member of TOTO GALLERY・MA and professor of the Department of Design and Architecture in the Kyoto Institute of Technology School of Science and Technology.
Alera Architect