Category Archives: history

I.M. Pei – Building China Modern on PBS

Premiering nationally on Wednesday, March 31, 2010 at 9 p.m. (ET) on PBS, American Masters’s I.M. Pei: Building China Modern follows Pei on this historic journey to define China’s architectural vision as it comes into its own on the world stage. Noted architect I.M. Pei, who left his native China in the 1930s, was invited to design a modern museum to house the antiquities of Suzhou, where he grew up. This film follows his seven-and-a-half-year personal and architectural journey from west to east, a literal coming home — a realization of Pei’s lifelong dream, but also his biggest challenge and a work that he defines as “my biography.” The program includes commentary from local residents, design specialists, Suzhou officials and a stellar array of architects, designers and scholars commenting on Pei’s life and work. Here’s more about the program:

I.M. Pei has been called the most important living modern architect, defining the landscapes of some of the world’s greatest cities. A monumental figure in his field and a laureate of the prestigious Pritzker Architecture Prize, Pei is the senior statesman of modernism and last surviving link to such great early architects as Corbusier, Gropius, and Mies van der Rohe. Entering into the twilight of his career and well into his eighties, Pei returns to his ancestral home of Suzhou, China to work on his most personal project to date. He is commissioned to build a modern museum in the city’s oldest neighborhood which is populated by classical structures from the Ming and Qing dynasties. For the architect who placed the pyramid at the Louvre, the test to integrate the new with the old is familiar but still difficult. The enormous task is to help advance China architecturally without compromising its heritage. In the end, what began as his greatest challenge and a labor of sentiment, says Pei, ultimately becomes “my biography.”

The film captures Pei as he forges an architectural language that brings together Western modernity and Eastern tradition into a current synthesis. After decades of living in the U.S. and amassing unprecedented international acclaim for his projects, Pei returns as a “foreigner” to his birth country to give a new direction for Chinese architecture in which history can live in the midst of change. In effect, Pei, who has contributed to America’s urban landscape during the height of its architectural and engineering power is now helping China do the same. Few architects have played such a critical dual role.

With an agenda of change, Pei inevitably enters into a crucible of conflict in Suzhou. For those concerned about the loss of traditional forms of architectural identity, he is too modern. For those who would simply bulldoze China’s past, he is too tradition-minded. Adding to the already complex assignment, he faces the controversy of displacing residents living at the museum site. To meet the design challenges, Pei draws on ideas that stretch far back within his own life and work – including a 1946 thesis project at Harvard, where he was taught abstract modern architecture. Throughout his education and career, Pei maintains his “impossible dream” to bring together modernity and traditional, regional influences (including nature) in his work. Eight years in the making, American Masters’ I.M. Pei: Building China Modern traces Pei’s pursuit of that dream and explores the defining conflicts of our age – the lure of the modern versus the pull of history. The result is a surprisingly revealing and intimate portrait of the man who set as his goal nothing less than the redefinition of architecture in modern China.

Check your local listing on when this runs in your PBS station.

I.M. Pei – Building China Modern Trailer

Hiroshima Atomic Bomb Survivors in the USA

Here’s a special report about Hiroshima Atomic Bomb Survivors. The Japanese government estimates about 1,200 A-bomb survivors live in the U.S. Their average age is about 76. Many still bear physical and emotional scars. Survivors have a 50% higher rate of many types of cancer than the average population and five times higher rates of leukemia. Even their kids need to get examined on a regular basis.

Hiroshima Atomic Bomb Survivors

Who was Bruce Lee?

Most people know Bruce Lee from his martial arts films from the 70’s, but he more than that. He’s was a philosopher, writer, father husband, actor, director, producer, and teacher. In How Bruce Lee Changed the World on History Channel, you can see the influence he left in marital arts, film making, fitness training, music, philosophy, and even branding. Shannon Lee talks about the impact her father left.

Who was Bruce Lee?

Vietnamese American Oral Histories Project

Over the weekend, we participated in a panel at the 2009 OCA National Convention. After the panel, we learned about the Vietnamese American Oral Histories Project. (Thanks Jason W.)

The project is dedicated to collecting, recording, and documenting the stories of the thousands of Vietnamese Americans who fled Vietnam in the years following the Vietnam War. Their mission is to collect at least five hundred truly courageous and inspirational personal stories of success and struggles of Vietnamese Americans who have risked their lives to escape communist oppression to find freedom, and have toiled tirelessly to find financial success and happiness for themselves and for their families in the United States. Join the facebook group to learn more about the Vietnamese American Oral Histories Project and how you can help out.

Watching the trailer for the project reminds us of the film Journey from the Fall.

Vietnamese American Oral Histories Project Trailer