Yang Hongxun
Yang Hongxun (Chinese: 杨鸿勋; 4 December 1931 – 17 April 2016) was a Chinese architect, architectural historian, and archaeologist. He was a professor at the Institute of Archaeology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, and a founder of the field of architectural archaeology in China.[1] He published a number of acclaimed books in the fields of architectural history and archaeology of China, and designed the National Museum of Chinese Writing and the Longshan Culture Museum.
Life and career
[edit]Yang was born on 4 December 1931 in Li County, Hebei, Republic of China.[2] He graduated from the Department of Architecture of Tsinghua University in 1955, and was assigned to work as an assistant to the renowned scholar Liang Sicheng at the Institute of Civil Engineering and Architecture of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.[1] He helped Liang found the Architectural Theory and History Research Office, which became part of the Institute of Architectural Sciences after 1957.[2]
In 1973, Yang moved to the Institute of Archaeology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences on the invitation of director Xia Nai. There he established the program for architectural archaeology. He spent the rest of his career at the institute and was later promoted to associate professor and professor. He also taught as an adjunct professor at Fudan University, Tongji University, South China University of Technology, and National Taiwan University.[2]
Yang's research focus was the history and archaeology of architecture. In 2001, his Collection of Papers on Architectural Archaeology (建筑考古学论文集, 1987) was voted by readers of the national academic newspaper China Cultural Relics News (中国文物报) as the best book on archaeology and museology of the 20th century. Another book of his, A Treatise on the Gardens of Jiangnan (江南园林论, 1994), was voted the third best.[2]
Yang was awarded a special pension for distinguished scholars by the State Council of China, and served as an advisor to UNESCO.[2] He was elected a member of the Russian Academy of Architecture and Construction Sciences in 2005.[1]
Yang died on 17 April 2016 in Beijing, aged 84.[3]
Design works
[edit]Yang designed the National Museum of Chinese Writing , which opened in 2009 in Anyang, Henan, the home of the oracle bones. The museum resembles the Chinese character yong (墉), meaning "city wall", in its ancient pictographic form of the oracle bone script (a square representing walls surrounded by four gateways). However, his design choice has been criticized for being too literal rather than figurative, thus limiting the design solution.[4]
He also designed the Longshan Culture Museum, which opened in 1994 at Chengziya, the type site of the Longshan culture, in Shandong. The museum is in the shape of a black bird, a sacred symbol of the culture.[5]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Wang Wei 王巍, ed. (2014). 中国考古学大辞典 [Great Dictionary of Chinese Archaeology] (in Chinese). Shanghai Cishu Chubanshe. pp. 93–94. ISBN 978-7-5326-4027-0. OCLC 889734502.
- ^ a b c d e "杨鸿勋" [Yang Hongxun]. Institute of Archaeology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. 26 August 2014. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
- ^ "著名建筑史学家、建筑考古学家杨鸿勋逝世,享年85岁". The Paper. 19 April 2016. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
- ^ Hanks, Laura Hourston (2012). "Writing Spatial Stories". In Macleod, Suzanne; Hanks, Laura Hourston; Hale, Jonathan (eds.). Museum Making: Narratives, Architectures, Exhibitions. Routledge. p. 69. ISBN 978-1-136-44574-3.
- ^ "济南:龙山文化博物馆". Department of Culture and Tourism, Shandong Provincial Government. 3 November 2015. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
- 1931 births
- 2016 deaths
- Chinese architectural historians
- Chinese archaeologists
- Scientists from Hebei
- Historians from Hebei
- Writers from Baoding
- Tsinghua University alumni
- Academic staff of Fudan University
- Academic staff of Tongji University
- Academic staff of the South China University of Technology
- Academic staff of the National Taiwan University
- Chinese architects
- Museum designers