A documentary with an interview for the Venice Biennale and film, still in production, with the same director and the same character (Winm Wenders and Peter Zumthor), became confused as the same thing. It all started with the confusion created by certain media (first suedostschweiz.ch, and quickly followed Archidaily and others). The information on the Internet flies and when it is about important characters more, sometimes wanting to get the scoop some are carried away.

Peter Zumthor is well known, but thanks to this confusion, he returns to the forefront of today. Furthermore, this mess has increase more buzz on the film and the name of the director, Wim Wenders, is more popular between all architects. These days his movie "Pina" (highly recommended) is in Madrid and can be seen in theaters "Ideal".

"Peter Zumthor is an architect admired throughout the world, and one whose uncompromising approach to his work leads him to reject the trappings of star architecture. German filmmaker Wim Wenders meets the architect at work in his small studio in the village of Haldenstein, Switzerland. Wenders' film seeks to bring to light the combination of poetry, practicality and radical simplicity behind Zumthor's work."

"Notes from a Day in the Life of an Architect" Peter Zumthor at Work.

By Wim Wenders. 10 min, colour, HD Digital.
Premiere at the Architecture Biennale in Venice on August 29, 2012.

Director.- Wim Wenders
Directors of Photography.- Donata Wenders, Luca Lucchesi
Editor.- Toni Froschhammer
Music.- Vera Kappeler und Peter Conradin Zumthor
Sound Recording and Mix.- Ansgar Frerich

Production.- Neue Road Movies with support of Rolf Sachs
Postproduction.- DieBasisBerlin & Schnittbar
Shooting location.- Atelier Peter Zumthor & Partner at Haldenstein, Switzerland.

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Peter Zumthor was born on April 26, 1943, the son of a cabinet maker, Oscar Zumthor, in Basel, Switzerland. He trained as a cabinet maker from 1958 to 1962. From 1963-67, he studied at the Kunstgewerbeschule, Vorkurs and Fachklasse with further studies in design at Pratt Institute in New York.

In 1967, he was employed by the Canton of Graubünden (Switzerland) in the Department for the Preservation of Monuments working as a building and planning consultant and architectural analyst of historical villages, in addition to realizing some restorations. He established his own practice in 1979 in Haldenstein, Switzerland where he still works with a small staff of fifteen. Zumthor is married to Annalisa Zumthor-Cuorad. They have three children, all adults, Anna Katharina, Peter Conradin, and Jon Paulin, and two grandchildren.

Since 1996, he has been a professor at the Academy of Architecture, Universitá della Svizzera Italiana, Mendrisio. He has also been a visiting professor at the University of Southern California Institute of Architecture and SCI-ARC in Los Angeles in 1988; at the Technische Universität, Munich in 1989; and at the Graduate School of Design, Harvard University in 1999.

His many awards include the Praemium Imperiale from the Japan Art Association in 2008 as well as the Carlsberg Architecture Prize in Denmark in 1998, and the Mies van der Rohe Award for European Architecture in 1999. In 2006, he received the Thomas Jefferson Foundation Medal in Architecture from the University of Virginia. The American Academy of Arts and Letters bestowed the Arnold W. Brunner Memorial Prize in Architecture in 2008.

In the recent book published by Barrons Educational Series, Inc. titled, Architectura, Elements of Architectural Style, with the distinguished architectural historian from Australia, Professor Miles Lewis, as general editor, the Zumthor’s Thermal Bath building at Vals is described as “a superb example of simple detailing that is used to create highly atmospheric spaces. The design contrasts cool, gray stone walls with the warmth of bronze railings, and light and water are employed to sculpt the spaces. The horizontal joints of the stonework mimic the horizontal lines of the water, and there is a subtle change in the texture of the stone at the waterline. Skylights inserted into narrow slots in the ceiling create a dramatic line of light that accentuates the fluidity of the water. Every detail of the building thus reinforces the importance of the bath on a variety of levels.”

In the book titled Thinking Architecture, first published by Birkhauser in 1998, Zumthor set down in his own words a philosophy of architecture. One sample of his thoughts is as follows: “I believe that architecture today needs to reflect on the tasks and possibilities which are inherently its own. Architecture is not a vehicle or a symbol for things that do not belong to its essence. In a society that celebrates the inessential, architecture can put up a resistance, counteract the waste of forms and meanings, and speak its own language. I believe that the language of architecture is not a question of a specific style. Every building is built for a specific use in a specific place and for a specific society. My buildings try to answer the questions that emerge from these simple facts as precisely and critically as they can.”

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Wim Wenders was born in Düsseldorf in 1945. After two years of studying medicine and philosophy and a yearlong stay in Paris as a painter he attended the University of Television and Film in Munich from 1967 to 1970

One of the most important figures to emerge from the “New German Cinema” period in the 1970s, he was a founding member of the German film distribution “Filmverlag der Autoren” in 1971 and he established his own production company “Road Movies” in Berlin in 1975. Alongside directing atmospheric auteur films Wenders works with the medium of photography, and his poignant images of desolate landscapes engage themes including memory, time and movement.

A major survey of his photography, “Pictures from the surface of the Earth”, was exhibited in museums and art institutions worldwide. Wim Wenders has published numerous books with essays and photographs. Wim Wenders became a member of the Academy of Arts Berlin in 1984. He was awarded honorary doctorates at the Sorbonne University in Paris (1989), the Theological Faculty of the University of Fribourg (1995), the University of Louvain (2005) and the Architectural Faculty of the University of Catania (2010). He is founding member and president of the European Film Academy and member of the order Pour le Mérite. Currently he is teaching film as a professor at the University of Fine Arts of Hamburg.

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Published on: September 11, 2012
Cite: "NOTES FROM A DAY IN THE LIFE OF AN ARCHITECT" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/notes-a-day-life-architect> ISSN 1139-6415
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