Jørn Utzon
Pritzker Architecture Prize
Laureate 2003
Photo by: Ole Haupt
Citation from the Jury
Jørn Utzon is an architect
whose roots extend back into history — touching
on the Mayan, Chinese and Japanese, Islamic cultures,
and many others, including his own Scandinavian legacies.
He combines these more ancient heritages with his own
balanced discipline, a sense of architecture as art, and natural instinct for organic structures related to site
conditions.The range of his projects is vast, from the sculptural
abstractionof the Sydney Opera House to handsome, humane housing;
a church that remains a masterwork with its remarkably
lyrical ceilings; as well as monumental public buildings
for government and commerce.
His housing is designed to provide not only privacy
for its
inhabitants, but pleasant views of the landscape, and
flexibilityfor individual pursuits — in short, designed
with people in mind.There is no doubt that the Sydney Opera
House is his masterpiece.It is one of the great iconic buildings
of the 20th century, animage of great beauty that has become
known throughout the world — a symbol for not
only a city, but a whole country and continent.
“I like to be on the edge of the possible,”
is something Jørn Utzon has said. His work
shows the world that he has been there and beyond
— he proves that the marvelous and seemingly impossiblein
architecture can be achieved. He has always been ahead of
histime. He rightly joins the handful of Modernists who
have shaped the past century with buildings of timeless
and enduring quality.
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