Josiah Conder (28 September 1852 – 21 June 1920) was a British architect who was hired by the Meiji Japanese government as a professor of architecture for the Imperial College of Engineering and became architect of Japan's Public Works.[1] He started his own practice after 1888.
Conder designed numerous public buildings in Tokyo, including the Rokumeikan, which became a controversial symbol of Westernisation in the Meiji period.[2] He educated young Japanese architects, notably Tatsuno Kingo and Katayama Tōkuma, earning him the nickname "father of Japanese modern architecture."[3]
Conder arrived in Tokyo in January 1877 and quickly established a reputation as a dedicated and highly skilled teacher. The Calendar of the College was prepared by its principal, Henry Dyer, a 6 year programme, consisting of a basic course, technical course and practice course, 2 years for each. Conder taught both technical subjects and practice including design theory, architectural history, drawing, technical draftsmanship.[15] Most graduates played essential roles in the development of modern Japan's architecture, including Tatsuno Kingo, Katayama Tōkuma, Sone Tatsuzō and Satachi Shichijirō. Yorinaka Tsumaki and Shimoda Kikutaro, who left the Imperial College of Engineering before graduation, also became successful architects.[16]
Conder taught history of oriental architecture using James Fergusson's works which insisted that there was no substantial architecture in the Orient except Mughal architecture,[17] a kind of Saracenic architecture.[18] Conder believed Saracenic based style might be suitable for modern Japan, and utilized it as Pseudo-Saracenic style for his early works including the Tokyo Imperial Museum, the retail shop of the Hokkaido Development Authority and the Rokumeikan.[19] This style was limitedly accepted by Tatsuno Kingo for his design of the Kokugi-Kan (National Sumo Wrestling Hall),[20] and Conder was very disappointed that most of his students did not understand his intention.
Conder was charged with transforming the Marunouchi area into a London-style business district by the Ministry of Industry on a five-year contract.[21] Despite residing in Japan, he kept up a professional affiliation with the Royal Institute of British Architects, becoming an Associate in 1874 and a Fellow in 1884.[22] He became a part-time lecturer until he set up his own practice in 1888. Some of his former students set up the Architectural Institute of Japan and made Conder its first honorary president.[23] He was awarded the Order of the Sacred Treasures (3rd class) in 1894.[24]
Conder developed a keen interest in Japanese arts and after a long period of petitioning, was finally accepted to study painting with the artist Kawanabe Kyōsai.[25] Kyōsai dubbed Conder Kyōei (暁英), incorporating the character ei (英) from the Japanese name for Britain. Conder also studied Enshu school ikebana.[26] His studies led to a number of publications, among them "The Flowers of Japan and The Art of Floral Arrangement" (1891), "Landscape Gardening in Japan" (1893) and "Paintings and Studies by Kawanabe Kyosai" (1911). He wrote the first after a lecture at the Asiatic Society of Japan.[27]
In 1915, the Tokyo Imperial University awarded Conder an honorary doctorate.[28] He remained in Japan for the rest of his life. His grave is at the temple of Gokoku-ji in Bunkyo, Tokyo.
Notable buildings
Conder's architectural designs incorporated a wide variety of styles, including European and colonial elements. Although he designed over fifty buildings during his career in Japan, many no longer exist.
Notable buildings surviving today are the residence of Iwasaki Yanosuke, founder of the Mitsubishi group in Yushima (1896, now the Kyu-Iwasaki-tei Garden) and the Mitsui Club in Mita, Tokyo (1913).
^Watanabe, Toshio (2006). "Japanese Imperial Architecture". In Ellen P, Conant (ed.). Challenging Past And Present: The Metamorphosis of Nineteenth-Century Japanese Art. University of Hawaii Press.
^Bedford Modern School of the Black And Red, by Andrew Underwood, 1981. ISBN9780950760803
^Thomas Roger Smith in 1871 England Census, Joshiah Conder, servant, age 18, architect pupil, born about 1853 at Brixton, Surrey, Civil Parish at Lewisham, Christchurch, Town Forest Hill.
^Conder, Josiah (1 July 1830). The modern traveller: a description geographical, historical and topographical of the various countries of the globe. Duncan. OCLC896599226.
^"Obituary. francis roubiliac conder, 1815-1889". Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers. 100 (1890): 379–383. 1 January 1890. doi:10.1680/imotp.1890.20698.
^"Empire Survey Review". Secretary of State for the Colonies. 1 April 1943 – via Google Books.
^James Fergusson, History of Indian and Eastern Architecture, London, 1876, p.710. "It may be, however, that the Japanese do not belong to one of the building races of mankind, and have no taste for this mode of magnificence. It is the same story as in China",
^James Fergusson, The Illustrated Handbook of Architecture, 1855, p.433.
^Izumida Hideo, Design as National Identity - Islamic Style in Modern Japan, Proceedings of the SAHANZ Conference Asia-Australinesia, July 1992, pp.131-146.
^Twin entrance towers were crown by Chhatri, an important motif of Mugal architecture
Shuichi Kato (translated and adapted by Junko Abe and Leza Lowitz), Japan: Spirit & Form, 1987–88 (1994), ISBN0-8048-1969-6
Stewart, David B (2002). The Making of a Modern Japanese Architecture, From the Founders to Shinohara and Isozaki. Kodansha International. ISBN978-4770029331.
External links
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