photography by TAKASHI HOMMA No photographer has better captured the aesthetic of Japanese urban landscape than Takashi Homma. Here he has photographed two types of Japanese architecture — the International House and the Nishinoyama House — separated in time by half a century, both celebrating the delicate interaction between gardens, light, air, and glass in a simple, modest, and elegant way. The INTERNATIONAL HOUSE was commissioned by the Rockefellers and built in 1955 in the heart of Tokyo by Japanese architects Kunio Maekawa, Junzo- Sakakura, and Junzo- Yoshimura. It was expanded in 1976. It houses a private, nonprofit organization for the purpose of promoting cultural exchange. Overlooking Kyoto is the NISHINOYAMA HOUSE, a tight cluster of 10 very modern residences, constructed in 2013 by Kazuyo Sejima. Each unit interacts with one another in a maze of picture windows, micro-gardens, and narrow passageways that both separate and unite them.
International House, Tokyo, 1955
Nishinoyama House, Kyoto, 2013
International House, Tokyo, 1955
Nishinoyama House, Kyoto, 2013