Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Pritzker-winner Doshi says award to improve architectu­re’s status in India

- Anirudh Bhattachar­yya letters@hindustant­imes.com

: For Prof Balkrishna Doshi, there is a sense of fulfilment: After over six decades of inhabiting the space, he received the field’s highest honour, the Pritzker Prize at a ceremony in Toronto, making him the first Indian to be awarded the so-called ‘Nobel of architectu­re’.

“It is one of the rarest things one could expect in life,” he said in an interview the morning after receiving the award at a ceremony in the Aga Khan Museum. “What more do you expect? This is a crowning glory. So at the age of 90, if I get that kind of a thing, what more can I expect? I’m fulfilled.”

Doshi, who was born in Pune and lives in Ahmedabad, has collected numerous accolades during his distinguis­hed career but the Pritzker is special since it also brings recognitio­n to Indian architectu­re. “That will be extremely significan­t in the Indian context because architectu­re as a profession doesn’t have a kind of status in India today except marketing. I mean, architect is synonymous with developers. “First time, there is the recognitio­n that architectu­re is a discipline which is extremely important in a civilised society. So there will be respect for architectu­re,” he said.

Doshi joins a roster of impressive, if not legendary names among architects who have won the Pritzker since it was establishe­d in 1979, such as Zaha Hadid, Rem Koolhaas, Frank Gehry and Oscar Niemeyer.

He became aware of the selection when the Prize’s executive director Martha Thorne called him in January. Thorne said she was in a “delicate way” seeking to inquire if he could travel to collect the award in Toronto since that is among the mandatory conditions for recipients. Doshi responded, “Of course I can travel. I was happy about the award, so I could have gone to the moon or to the deserts.”

Doshi was born into a family running a furniture business and he said he came into architectu­re “by chance”. He started studying the discipline as India gained Independen­ce. “Favourable coincidenc­es helped me in my life,” he said. Among those was being associated with Le Corbusier, the visionary French architect renowned for his projects in creating the modern city of Chandigarh and in Ahmedabad. Doshi describes Le Corbusier as his “guru”. In his official statement accepting the Prize, Doshi said, “His teachings led me to question identity and compelled me to discover new regionally adopted contempora­ry expression for a sustainabl­e holistic habitat.”

His work is described as a “symphony”, engaging the elements.

His work “explores the relationsh­ips between fundamenta­l needs of human life, connectivi­ty to self and culture, and understand­ing of social traditions, within the context of a place and its environmen­t, and through a response to Modernism,” a release from the Pritzker Prize noted. “Childhood recollecti­ons, from the rhythms of the weather to the ringing of temple bells, inform his designs.”

Among his multiple endeavours are the Aranya low-cost housing project in Indore, the Indian Institute of Management in Bangalore, Centre for Environmen­tal Planning and Technology in Ahmedabad as well as “cultural spaces” such as Tagore Memorial Hall and the Institute of Indology, also in that city, as well as his own studio, Sangath. He continues to be with Vastushilp­a, the consultanc­y he founded.

Doshi is hopeful this award will have a “long-lasting impact” rather than one that is momentary. As India looks for affordable and quality housing for its population, there is a role for creative solutions.

“In the condition in which we are now, talking about urbanisati­on, planning, rural developmen­t, economy, employment, this is the discipline through which other countries have worked and taken their guidance,” he said.

“So now perhaps the government and authoritie­s will look at architects, and significan­t architects, not necessaril­y foreign architects, and ask them to work with them.”

TORONTO

 ?? COURTESY: THE HYATT FOUNDATION/PRITZKER ARCHITECTU­RE PRIZE ?? Prof Balkrishna Doshi (right) at the Pritzker Prize ceremony in Toronto, along with Tom Pritzker, chair of the Hyatt Foundation, which sponsors the award.
COURTESY: THE HYATT FOUNDATION/PRITZKER ARCHITECTU­RE PRIZE Prof Balkrishna Doshi (right) at the Pritzker Prize ceremony in Toronto, along with Tom Pritzker, chair of the Hyatt Foundation, which sponsors the award.
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