Renzo Piano to receive the Sonning Prize 2008
Posted 21 April 2008
The
Sonning Prize, which is Denmark’s largest cultural
award in the order of DKK 1 million, is given every other
year by the University of Copenhagen for “commendable work
that benefits European culture”.
As an architect,
Renzo Piano has left his intriguing
marks around the world. His architecture can be seen as “an
unerring, remarkable and quite extraordinary synthesis of
the fine and rare blend of art, architecture and engineering”
as the recommendation of
Renzo Piano reads.
This is evident in his work that includes many prominent
landmarks in Europe’s big cities such as the revolutionary
Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, the master plan for
Potsdammer Platz in Berlin, the Paul Klee Museum in Bern,
the music auditorium Parco della Musica in Rome and in one
of his most recent works, the Shard skyscraper in London.”
The recommendation of
Renzo Piano further states:
“While his work embraces the idiom, the materials and the
latest technological competence of this era, he is clearly a
European with deep roots in classical Italian tradition,
architectural history and philosophy. His intellectual
curiosity and problem solving techniques can be recognized
in elegantly expressed structures and constructions. But his
belief in the social aspects of architecture and
humanitarian ideals makes him to the same extent intensely
engaged in planning housing areas as well as scenery and
sustainability.”
The 70 year old
Renzo Piano was born in Genoa (Genova),
Italy, where he still lives and has his drawing office; the
Renzo Piano Building Workshop. The
company’s website
takes
the visitor on a photographical journey to some of
Renzo Piano’s exceptional works e.g. the New York Times building
in New York.
The
Sonning Prize is presented Wednesday 1 October 2008
in the Ceremonial Hall at University of Copenhagen.
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