As we had in the first article on the expected news of the day, the new 2012 Pritzker Architecture Prize was awarded to the "young" 48 year old Chinese architect Wang Shu, who along with his wife, Lu Wenyu, founded the study architecture "Amateur architecture Studio."

Jury Citation

The architecture of the 2012 Pritzker Prize Laureate Wang Shu, opens new horizons while at the same time resonates with place and memory. His buildings have the unique ability to evoke the past, without making direct references to history. Born in 1963 and educated in China, Wang Shu’s architecture is exemplary in its strong sense of cultural continuity and re-invigorated tradition. In works undertaken by the office he founded with his partner and wife Lu Wenyu, Amateur Architecture Studio, the past is literally given new life as the relationship between past and present is explored. The question of the proper relation of present to past is particularly timely, for the recent process of urbanization in China invites debate as to whether architecture should be anchored in tradition or should look only toward the future. As with any great architecture, Wang Shu´s work is able to transcend that debate, producing an architecture that is timeless, deeply rooted in its context and yet universal.

Wang Shu´s buildings have a very rare attribute—a commanding and even, at times, monumental presence, while functioning superbly and creating a calm environment for life and daily activities. The History Museum at Ningbo is one of those unique buildings that while striking in photos, is even more moving when experienced. The museum is an urban icon, a well-tuned repository for history and a setting where the visitor comes first. The richness of the spatial experience, both in the exterior and interior is remarkable. This building embodies strength, pragmatism and emotion all in one.

Wang Shu knows how to embrace the challenges of construction and employ them to his advantage. His approach to building is both critical and experimental. Using recycled materials, he is able to send several messages on the careful use of resources and respect for tradition and context as well as give a frank appraisal of technology and the quality of construction today, particularly in China. Wang Shu’s works that use recycled building materials, such as roof tiles and bricks from dismantled walls, create rich textural and tactile collages. Working in collaboration with construction workers, the outcome sometimes has an element of unpredictability, which in his case, gives the buildings a freshness and spontaneity.

In spite of his age, young for an architect, he has shown his ability to work successfully at various scales. The Xiangshan Campus of China Academy of Arts in Hangzhou is like a small town, providing a setting for learning and living for students, professors and staff. The exterior and interior connections between buildings and private and public spaces provide a rich environment where an emphasis on livability prevails. He is also capable of creating buildings on an intimate scale, such as the small exhibition hall or pavilions inserted into the fabric of the historic center of Hangzhou. As in all great architecture, he does this with a master’s naturalness, making it look as if it were an effortless exercise.

He calls his office Amateur Architecture Studio, but the work is that of a virtuoso in full command of the instruments of architecture—form, scale, material, space and light. The 2012 Pritzker Architecture Prize is given to Wang Shu for the exceptional nature and quality of his executed work, and also for his ongoing commitment to pursuing an uncompromising, responsible architecture arising from a sense of specific culture and place.

Wang Shu is the new winner and not have to travel far to have it give it the prestigious award ceremony will be held in Beijing, China on May 25th as announced last October jointly by Guo Jinlong, mayor of Beijing, China, and Thomas J. Pritzker, president of the Hyatt, revealing the location of the 34th ceremony of the Pritzker Prize.

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Wang Shu (architect and professor) was born in 1963 in Urumqi, a city in Xinjiang, the westernmost province of China. He received his first degree in architecture in 1985 and his Master's degree in 1988, both from the Nanjing Institute of Technology.

Wang Shu and his wife, Lu Wenyu, founded Amateur Architecture Studio in 1997 in Hangzhou, China. The office name references the approach an amateur builder takes—one based on spontaneity, craft skills and cultural traditions. Wang Shu spent a number of years working on building sites to learn traditional skills. The firm utilizes his knowledge of everyday techniques to adapt and transform materials for contemporary projects. This unique combination of traditional understanding, experimental building tactics, and intensive research defines the basis for the studio’s architectural projects. In 2012, Wang Shu became a Pritzker Architecture Prize Laureate, and in 2023, he was named a Member of the French Academy of Architecture. He and Lu Wenyu co-founded the Architecture Department at the China Academy of Art in 2003, followed by the establishment of the School of Architecture in 2007, where he served as its first dean.

The studio takes a critical view of the architecture profession’s part in the demolition and destruction of large urban areas. At the 2006 Venice Architecture Biennale, Amateur Architecture Studio expressed views of ongoing demolitions in “Tiled Garden,” an installation made from 66,000 recycled tiles salvaged from demolition sites. Rather than looking toward the West for inspiration, as many of Shu’s contemporaries do, his work is rooted in the context of Chinese history and culture. Together with Lu Wenyu, he maintains a sustained focus on existing materials, the traces of ordinary life and the craftsmanship found on construction sites. Their approach advocates a radical architectural experimentation rooted in the vernacular and the immediate context, combining recycled materials with modern engineering and merging memory with innovation as a response to the reality of large-scale urban demolition. Their work articulates a global perspective that transcends the dichotomies between city and countryside, and between the artificial and the natural.

Wang Shu has often explained in lectures and interviews that “to me, architecture is spontaneous for the simple reason that architecture is a matter of everyday life. When I say that I build a ‘house’ instead of a ‘building’, I am thinking of something that is closer to life, everyday life. When I named my studio ‘Amateur Architecture’, it was to emphasize the spontaneous and experimental aspects of my work, as opposed to being ‘official and monumental’."

Wang Shu is Professor and Head of the Architecture School at the China Academy of Art, Hangzhou. In 2011, he became the first Chinese Kenzo Tange Visiting Professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Design in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He has also been a visiting professor at MIT, UCL, Rice University, the University of Hong Kong and Tongji University, and has received honorary distinctions such as an Honorary Professorship from Southeast University, an Honorary Fellowship from RIBA, an Honorary Doctoral Degree from RISD, and an Honorary Doctoral Degree in Sociology from the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

He has exhibited individually and participated in several major international exhibitions including: the 2010 Venice Architecture Biennale at which he received a special mention for the “Decay of a Dome” installation – a project whose light, mobile and utterly simple structure can be speedily constructed or returned to nothingness; the 2009 “Architecture as a Resistance” solo exhibition at the BOZAR Centre for Fine Arts in Brussels; the 2007 Shenzhen & Hong Kong Bi-City Biennale of Urbanism\Architecture; the 2003 “Alors, La Chine?” exhibit at the Centre Pompidou, Paris; the 2002 Shanghai Biennale at the Shanghai Art Museum; the 2001 “TU MU-Young Architecture of China” exhibit at AEDES Gallery, Berlin; and the 1999 Chinese Young Architects’ Experimental Works Exhibition, UIA Congress, Beijing. His work has also been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art in New York and has been the subject of solo exhibitions at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, at Arc en rêve in Bordeaux, and at BOZAR in Brussels. In 2021, the New York Times selected the Xiangshan Campus of the China Academy of Art as one of “The 25 Most Significant Works of Postwar Architecture” worldwide.

In 2011, Wang Shu received the Gold Medal of Architecture (grande médaille d’or) from the l'Académie d'Architecture of France. In 2010, Wang Shu and Lu Wenyu were awarded the Schelling Architecture Prize, which goes to individuals who have responsibly advanced architecture's development with significant designs, realized buildings or with profound contributions to architectural history and theory. The Vertical Courtyard Apartment, in Hangzhou, was nominated for the 2008 German-based International Highrise Award. In 2005, the project “Five Scattered Houses” in Ningbo received an acknowledgement from the Asia Pacific Holcim Awards for sustainable construction, and in 2003, the Wenzheng Library received the Architecture Art Award of China. He was named one of the 100 Most Influential People in the World by Time in 2013 and received the 2019 Gold Medal of Tau Sigma Delta. From 2018 to 2024, he served as a juror for the Pritzker Architecture Prize.

Wang Shu/Amateur Architecture Studio is known for the following built works: Library of Wenzheng College, Suzhou University, China (2000); Ningbo Contemporary Art Museum, Ningbo, China, (2005); Five Scattered Houses, Ningbo, China (2005); Xiangshan Campus, China Academy of Art (Phase I) Hangzhou, China (2004); Xiangshan Campus, China Academy of Art (Phase II) Hangzhou, China (2007); Ceramic House, Jinhua, China (2006); Vertical Courtyard Apartments, Hangzhou, China (2007); Ningbo History Museum, Ningbo, China (2008); and, Exhibition Hall of the Imperial Street of the Southern Song Dynasty, Hangzhou, China (2009). Additional significant projects include Tiles Hill in Hangzhou, the Renovation of Wencun Village, the Fuyang Cultural Complex, the National Archives of Publications and Culture in Hangzhou, Lin’an Historic Museum, the Museum of Ancient Animals in Baoding, the Jin Sha Traditional Chinese Academy in Xiamen, and the Xi’an Opera House and Concert Hall.

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LU Wenyu (Hangzhou, 1966) is an architect and co-founded Amateur Architecture Studio with Wang Shu in 1997. Together, they founded the Architecture Department at China Academy of Art in 2003, initiating a new course of study that has profoundly influenced the teaching of architecture in China.

Lu is a member of the French Academy of Architecture for 2023 and was a visiting Professor at Harvard Graduate School of Design, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), University College London (UCL) and Rice University.

Together with Wang Shu, she maintains a sustained focus on existing materials, the traces of ordinary people's daily lives, the vitality of those unnamed, common structures, and the process and craftsmanship of artisans on the construction site. They advocate for a radical architectural experimentation that is rooted in the vernacular and the immediate context.

By combining recycled old building materials with modern engineering techniques and merging memory with innovation, they have offered a powerful response to the social reality of urban development that involves large-scale demolition and construction. Lu and Wang have consistently upheld a broad global perspective, expressing through their works an innovative vision that transcends the cultural conflict between city and countryside, and surpasses the traditions of the artificial and the natural, which is reflected in their built works such as Ningbo Historic Museum, Xiangshan Campus of China Academy of Art, The tiles hill in Hang Zhou, Renovation of Wencun Village, Fuyang Cultural Complex, The National Archives of Publications and Culture in Hangzhou, Preservation and Renovation of Southern Song Imperial Street, and Lin An Historic Museum, Museum of Ancient Animals in Baoding, Jin Sha Traditional Chinese Academy in Xia Men and Xi'an Opera House and Concert Hall.

Their works have been exhibited in prestigious international institutions, including La Biennale di Venezia, MOMA in New York and the Centre Pompidou in Paris, in addition to solo exhibitions at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Arc en rêve centre d’architecture Bordeaux, and BOZAR art Centre for Fine Arts Brussels. Their work “Xiangshan Campus of China Academy of Art” was one of “The 25 Most Significant Works of Postwar Architecture” all over the world, selected by the New York Times in 2021.

Lu Wenyu was awarded the Schelling Architecture Prize in Germany, a Special Mention at the Biennale Architettura in 2010 for the project “Decay of a Dome”, and listed among the RIBA’s 2015 Fellowships. She was the recipient 2019 Gold Medal of Tau Sigma Delta. She was a juror of the UNESCO Asia-Pacific Awards for Cultural Heritage Conservation. Lu Wenyu was the Chair of the Jury members for the RIBA International Prize 2024.

As a form of dual contemplation—a critical resistance against reality and a challenge towards the future—Wang Shu and Lu Wenyu together established a new Department of Architecture at the China Academy of Art in Hangzhou in 2003. They launched a new model of architectural education that begins with the understanding of materials, manual labour, and the depiction of Chinese gardens. In an attempt to translate the studio's practical experience into an educational paradigm, the School of Architecture was founded in 2007. Wang Shu is its inaugural dean, and Lu Wenyu is the director of the Sustainable Construction Center.

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Published on: February 27, 2012
Cite:
metalocus, JOSÉ JUAN BARBA
"The Pritzker Architecture Prize 2012. WANG SHU [II]" METALOCUS. Accessed
<https://www.metalocus.es/en/news/pritzker-architecture-prize-2012-wang-shu-ii> ISSN 1139-6415
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