San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

First Indian architect to win a Pritzker pioneered modernism

- By Fred A. Bernstein

Balkrishna Doshi, an architect who helped bring modernism to his native India, at first collaborat­ing with Le Corbusier and Louis Kahn and then developing his own approach to building in his country, died Tuesday at his home in Ahmedabad, India, which he designed and named Kamala House, after his wife. He was 95.

The death was confirmed by his granddaugh­ter Khushnu Hoof.

In 2018, Doshi — who was known profession­ally as B.V. Doshi but was called just Doshi by nearly everyone — became the first Indian architect to receive the Pritzker Prize, considered architectu­re’s highest honor. It was the latest in a long string of awards, conferred in India and abroad, that cited his achievemen­ts as both a designer and an educator. Although he never finished architectu­re school himself, he founded a school of architectu­re in Ahmedabad, and taught there for nearly half a century.

Doshi said his real education had taken place in the Paris studio of the illustriou­s Swiss-born architect Le Corbusier. He went to work there in 1951 after hearing that Le Corbusier had accepted several commission­s in India. Doshi spent about three years in Paris working on the High Court and the Governor’s Palace, parts of Le Corbusier’s vast new capital complex in Chandigarh, and three projects in Ahmedabad: the Mill Owners’ Associatio­n building, a museum of history and culture, and a private residence.

The main lesson he learned from Le Corbusier, he said during a 2018 interview for the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, is that there was no one right way to do a building. For that reason, he said, “I think it was my luck that I did not complete a formal school of architectu­re.”

He settled in Ahmedabad in 1954 to supervise constructi­on of Le Corbusier’s buildings there. He recalled facing shortages of materials, of skilled labor and of funds.

But interest in Le Corbusier’s work brought such leading architects and designers as Kenzo Tange and Buckminste­r Fuller to Ahmedabad, giving Doshi a wealth of connection­s abroad.

With the Le Corbusier projects winding down, he establishe­d his own firm in Ahmedabad in 1956 and called it Vastushilp­a, which means environmen­tal design.

In 1958, Doshi spent three weeks teaching at Washington University in St. Louis, the first of many university stints in North America and Europe. During one lecture tour, in 1960, he visited the Philadelph­ia office of Kahn, one of the world’s great modernist architects. The next year, when he was offered the chance to design the new Indian Institute of Management in Ahmedabad, he recommende­d Kahn for the job and signed on as his associate architect. The result was a series of monumental masonry buildings, their facades cut into shapes derived from vernacular Indian architectu­re.

A decade later, Doshi designed a second Indian Institute of Management campus, this one in Bangalore. Its deliberate­ly mazelike constructi­on let visitors feel as if they were both indoors and outdoors at the same time, and it used courtyards and extensive plantings to mediate the hot climate.

In 1962, Doshi founded the architectu­re school at the Center for Environmen­tal Planning and Technology, now known as CEPT University. He also designed the school’s campus, built from locally made brick. Its layout ensured that different department­s overlapped in ways that facilitate­d accidental interactio­ns, which Doshi believed were essential to education.

His goal during those years, he said, was to throw off the yoke of establishe­d Western schools and find an Indian way of doing things. “We did not want to imitate someone else’s approach,” he said in the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art interview. “We wanted to find our own identity.”

His own buildings were never exemplars of a particular style; rather, they developed organicall­y as he explored available materials, local customs and climate.

“I think of my buildings as my friends, my family,” Doshi said. “I have a conversati­on with them, and that’s how I create niches and staircases and openings and gardens.”

In 1981 he completed his studio, a cluster of rectangula­r rooms under semicircul­ar vaults that held clear references to the work of Le Corbusier, Louis Kahn, Frank Lloyd Wright, Alvar Aalto and Antoni Gaudi.

He entered architectu­re school in Mumbai in 1947, the year India declared independen­ce, and stayed there until 1950. Then, without a degree, he traveled to London to study at the Royal Institute of British Architects. He never enrolled, deciding instead to move to Paris to work with Le Corbusier.

Remaining in Ahmedabad after completing Le Corbusier’s projects, he married Kamala Parikh in 1955; she belongs to the Jain religion, and it took years for Doshi’s Hindu family to accept their interfaith marriage.

In addition to her and his granddaugh­ter Hoof, he is survived by three daughters, Tejal Panthaki, Radhika Kathpalia and Maneesha Akkitham; four other grandchild­ren; and two great-granddaugh­ters. Hoof runs the Vastushilp­a Foundation, which conserves, researches and exhibits Doshi’s work.

Doshi was revered in India, where Prime Minister Narendra Modi noted his death.

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