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  1. Isoya Yoshida (吉田 五十八, Yoshida Isoya, December 19, 1894, - March 24, 1974) was a Japanese architect. He graduated from Tokyo Art School (now Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music) in 1923. His style, known as sukiya, combines elements of traditional Japanese architecture and modernist architecture.

  2. Yoshida Isoya (born Dec. 19, 1894, Tokyo—died March 24, 1974, Tokyo) was a Japanese architect who was a pioneer in the modern sukiya style of building, in which an affinity for natural materials and traditional construction techniques finds expression in contemporary structures.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Isoya Yoshida was born in 1894, and is probably the most influential architect in terms of modernizing sukiya style. He strategically streamlined traditional details, advocated for large, uninterrupted walls, used nuts and bolts (traditional construction technique didn’t require metal nuts and bolts), and didn’t hesitate to use industrial ...

  4. May 7, 2021 · In contrast to the common canon that emphasizes Kenzo Tange’s invention of a Japanese modern architecture, Sugimoto names three heroes: Sutemi Horiguchi, Isoya Yoshida, and Togo Murano. In 1920, Horiguchi founded the Bunriha Kenchiku Kai (Secessionist Architecture Society), the first modernist architecture movement in Japan, to fuse ...

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  5. Okazaki Tsuruya was designed by the architect Isoya Yoshida, a giant in the field of modern sukiya construction. Our building is often called a masterpiece of this style, fusing as it does traditional elegance with a modern freshness.

  6. Profile of Yoshida Isoya, Japanese Architect, 1894–1974. This article was published on February 14, 2022 and last edited on March 29, 2024.

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  8. Yoshida, Isoya (18941974). Japanese architect. He made his name as a designer of timber houses, often discarding the logic of historical types, e.g. when creating windows in the corners of the buildings where traditionally they would have posts.