Donald Keene Center Visiting Fellows
Spring 2000
| OOKA
Makoto (Poet) |
Mr. Ooka is considered one of Japan’s finest poets and literary
critics. Born 1931, he is the author of the popular poetry column
Ori-ori no Uta, which has run daily on the front page of Asahi
Shimbun for nearly 20 years. Mr. Ooka is a former president of
Japan PEN Club (1989-93), professor of Japanese literature at Meiji
University (1965-87) and National University of Arts & Music
(1988-93), and member of the Advisory Board of Poetry International
(Rotterdam). Mr. Ooka has received numerous awards, including:
Officier, Ordre des Arts et des Lettres from the French
government, Yomiuri Prize for Literature, Kikuchi Kan Prize,
Hanatsubaki Prize, and Golden Wreath Prize. He is the author of
various collections of poetry in Japanese, French, and English as
well as collections of essays on Japanese and international
literature.
Mr. Ooka visited New York with his wife (Fukase Saki, playwright and
essayist) for one month in March, 2000. His activities included
workshops and seminars with Columbia graduate students in Japanese
literature (on kouta, imayo, and other forms of
classical Japanese poetry), the Sen Lecture ( "Kuruma-za (Sitting in
a Circle) - Thoughts on Japanese Group Mentality") at Columbia
University, lectures/readings at Princeton University, Harvard
University, and The Cooper Union, and at Japan Societies in New
York, Boston and San Francisco. |
|
BAN Shigeru
(Architect) |
One of Japan’s leading younger architects, Mr.
Ban gained international attention for his low-cost quickly built
relief structures, using durable cardboard tubing, built in Kobe
immediately following the earthquake of January 1995. He has since
constructed similar buildings for victims of earthquakes and other
natural disasters in Turkey and Rwanda.

Born in 1957, Mr. Ban received his architecture degree from The
Cooper Union (NY), following study at the Southern California
Institute of Architecture. He worked in the architecture firm of
Arata Isozaki (1982-83). In 1995, Mr. Ban established an NGO called
Voluntary Architects Network (VAN) and soon afterward was made
special consultant of the UN High Commission of Refugees (UNHCR).
He is also active as a designer of private homes, apartment houses
and public-housing developments, galleries, museums, railway
stations for JR, and furniture and industrial designs.
Mr. Ban’s awards include: SD Architect of the Year (1985); Tokyo
Society of Architects House Award (1993); Mainichi Design Prize
(1995); Tokyo Journal Innovative Arts Award (1996); Shinkenchiku
Magazine Yoshioka Award (1996); Intl. Architects Academy Ecopolis
Award (1996); Japan Institute of Architects Best Young Architect of
the Year Award (1997); JIA Tohoku Award (1998).
Mr. Ban presented a lecture entitled "Beyond Paper and Curtain:
Architectural Works and Humanitarian Activities of Shigeru Ban" at
Columbia University on April 24, 2000, which was co-sponsored by the
Donald Keene Center and the Graduate School of Architecture,
Planning & Preservation. Two days after his lecture at Columbia a
large environmental structure of Ban's opened in the garden of the
Museum of Modern Art in New York, and remained as a tem porary
installation in the MoMA until August. In June, Mr. Ban's design for
the Japanese Pavilion opened at Expo 2000 in Hanover, Germany, and
was acclaimed as the most successful Pavilion at the 2000 World's
Fair.
Mr. Ban returned to Columbia in the fall semester of 2000 to teach
an Architecture Studio course at Columbia. As part of this course,
Mr. Ban graciously offered to have students accompany him to Turkey,
where he was instrumental in constructing temporary shelters for the
thousands of people who were left homeless after a massive
earthquake struck in 1999. He completed his Visiting Fellow
activities in February 2001, when he presented various public
lectures at the New Jersey Institute of Technology, The Cooper
Union, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Japan Society (New
York), and the Graham Foundation/Architecture and Design Society of
the Art Institute of Chicago. |
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