Urban Monuments by Japan’s Gaudí: The Works of Japanese Architect Von Jour Caux

Culture

Buildings from Another World

Japanese architect Von Jour Caux has earned the moniker the “Gaudí of Japan” with his unique, eye-catching creations. His buildings, lavishly decorated with huge sculptures of goddesses and a vast array of exuberant details, stand out from their surroundings, impacting viewers with their mysterious energy and disorienting air of exoticism. They may appear at first glance like something from a theme park or a garishly designed love hotel, but the buildings express the distinct fantasy world of one of Japan’s most vibrant architects.

The façade of La Porta Izumi apartment building in Tokyo.
The façade of La Porta Izumi apartment building in Tokyo.

A stone’s throw from Waseda University in Shinjuku stands the Waseda El Dorado condominium, a structure whose appearance is reminiscent of housing projects Gaudí designed in Barcelona. In 1992, the Japan Times carried an article with the headline “Gaudi’s Ikebana of Cement and Steel Sets Root in Japan,” and the “Gaudí of Japan” tag has stuck ever since.

But the more I learn about Von, the more I am aware of the differences between the two architects. Every few months I conduct tours of some of Von’s most significant buildings in an attempt to dispel some of the preconceptions and misunderstandings that surround his work. I want people to understand that he is not some freak who creates bizarre buildings to shock and attract attention but is a remarkable artist who draws on an inexhaustible wellspring of other-worldly ideas.

Von Joux Cour (third from left) in front of Waseda El Dorado during an architectural tour of Tokyo organized by Access Point.
Von Joux Cour (third from left) in front of Waseda El Dorado during an architectural tour of Tokyo organized by Access Point.

Collaboration with Artists: The Art Complex Movement

Waseda El Dorado (1983): Shinjuku, Tokyo

Born Tanaka Toshirō in 1934, the architect took to calling himself Bon Jukō (romanized as Von Jour Caux) in 1974. The name, combining concepts from the ancient Sanskrit texts the Upanishads and the posthumous name of his adoptive father, is itself a manifestation of the self-expressive style of the artist.

Von graduated from the architecture department at Waseda University in 1956. Inspired by the works and ideas of German-American architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, he traveled to Chicago in 1962 with the intent of enrolling at the Illinois Institute of Technology. Once in the Windy City, though, he instead studied painting, sculpture, and arts and crafts at the School of Art Institute. It was there that he met his wife and life-long artistic collaborator, and together with other artist friends the couple started the art complex movement. The group’s first collaborative project was the Waseda El Dorado, a building designed on the utopian concept of a “city of gold” in the heart of Tokyo that makes a new style of beautiful living possible. Von and his wife collaborated in creating the extravagant wedding cake-like decorations on the structure’s façade that continue to inspire and delight passersby.

Inside the building, things are even more mysterious. At the end of a narrow corridor is a space dominated by a huge hand extending down from the ceiling. Von has been fascinated by the theater since childhood and he describes how incorporating fantastic elements makes it possible for people to experience a sense of drama by stirring up deep memories and provoking reveries and imaginative narratives in the mind. The intrusion of unexpected objects into corridors and other humdrum spaces duplicates life’s rites of passage and provokes musings as to whether an unseen hand of an almighty being is guiding the way through the space and on to paradise.

The wedding cake façade of Waseda El Dorado
The wedding cake façade of Waseda El Dorado

This mystical space was born from a collaboration between Von and a group of young artists whose works resonated with Von’s ideas. He gave the young artists the opportunity to turn their nascent concepts into reality, and they repaid this trust in kind by creating imaginative works. This approach allowed Von to overcome the challenges of a limited budget and time, producing a mutually beneficial relationship. This emphasis on collaboration is one aspect that differentiates Von from Gaudí.

The Spanish architect also worked with talented artists and craftsmen, but he saw them simply as a means to realize his own ideas. From the start, though, Von was different from his predecessor in his respect for his collaborators, giving them free rein and as much space as they needed to express their own ideas. In fact, he refers to Waseda El Dorado as a collaborative work by the art complex movement, made up of Von Jour Caux and his friends and comrades-in-arms. 

The hand hanging from the ceiling inside Waseda El Dorado is in fact a chair. 
The hand hanging from the ceiling inside Waseda El Dorado is in fact a chair.

next: Collaboration and Improvisation

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