The American Academy of Arts and Letters has announced Portuguese architect Eduardo Souto de Moura as the the 2019 Arnold W. Brunner Memorial Prize winner. The Academy’s annual architecture awards program began in 1955 with the inauguration of the Arnold W. Brunner Memorial Prize and has since expanded to include four Arts and Letters Awards.

The prize awards US$20,000 to an architect of any nationality who has made a significant contribution to architecture as an art.
Selected from a group of 33 nominated individuals, the Pritzker Prize winning architect was recognized for an architecture that is described by the jury chair, Annabelle Selldorf, as “[feeling] inevitable” and having a “timeless and profoundly humanist quality.”  He was honored for a body of work that includes notable projects such as the Estádio Municipal de Braga in Braga, Portugal (2003), the Burgo Tower in Burgo, Portugal (2007), the Paula Rego Museum in Cascais, (2009), new Abade Pedrosa Museum (2017).

Previous winners of the last few years include Smiljan Radic, Diébédo Francis Kéré, Phyllis Lambert, Sheila O'Donnell and John Tuomey, Alberto Campo Baeza, Kathryn Gustafson, and Merrill Elam and Mack Scogin.

In addition, the jury awarded four $10,000 Arts and Letters Awards to: Hernan Dias Alonzo, the director of Sci-Arc, for his influence on the future of architecture; Mario Gooden and Mabel O Wilson, who run the Global Africa Lab at Columbia's GSAPP, for advocating for a more just world; Eric Höweler and Meejin Yoon of Höweler + Yoon, for their innovative forms and structures; and Anne Rieselbach, the Program Director at the Architectural League of New York, for supporting the exploration of new ideas in urban design and architecture.

The awards will be presented in New York City in May at the Academy’s annual Ceremonial.

The jurors were Annabelle Selldorf (chair), Henry N. Cobb, Kenneth Frampton, Steven Holl, Thom Mayne, Laurie Olin, James Polshek, Billie Tsien, and Tod Williams.
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Eduardo Souto de Moura was born in Porto, Portugal in 1952. His father was a doctor (ophthalmologist) and his mother a home maker. He has one brother and one sister. The sister is also a doctor and his brother is a lawyer with a political career – formerly he was Attorney General of Portugal.

Following his early years at the Italian School, Souto de Moura enrolled in the School of Fine Arts in Porto, where he began as an art student, studying sculpture, but eventually achieving his degree in architecture. He credits a meeting with Donald Judd in Zurich for the switch from art to architecture. While still a student, he worked for architect Noé Dinis and then Álvaro Siza, the latter for five years. While studying and working with his professor of urbanism, Architect Fernandes de Sá, he received his first commission, a market project in Braga which has since been demolished because of changing business patterns.

After 2 years of military service he won the competition for the Cultural Centre in Porto. The beginning of his career as an independent architect.

He is frequently invited as a guest professor to Lausanne and Zurich in Switzerland as well as Harvard in the United States. These guest lectures at universities and seminars over the years have afforded him the opportunity to meet many colleagues in the field, among them Jacques Herzog and Aldo Rossi.

He is married and he has 3 daughters: Maria Luisa, Maria da Paz e Maria Eduarda.His wife, Luisa Penha, and the eldest daughter are architects, the second is a nurse and the third is on the Faculty of Architecture of the University of Oporto for the 3rd year.

Along with his architecture practice, Souto de Moura is a professor at the University of Oporto, and is a visiting professor at Geneva, Paris-Belleville, Harvard, Dublin and the ETH Zurich and Lausanne.

Often described as a neo-Miesian, but one who constantly strives for originality, Souto de Moura has achieved much praise for his exquisite use of materials -- granite, wood, marble, brick, steel, concrete -- as well as his unexpected use of color. Souto de Moura is clear on his view of the use of materials, saying, “I avoid using endangered or protected species. I think we should use wood in moderation and replant our forests as we use the wood. We have to use wood because it is one of the finest materials available.”

In an interview with Croquis, he explained, “I find Mies increasingly fascinating...There is a way of reading him which is just to regard him as a minimalist. But he always oscillated between classicism and neoplasticism...You only have to remember the last construction of his life, the IBM building, with that powerful travertine base that he drilled through to produce a gigantic door. Then on the other hand, he arrived in Barcelona and did two pavilions, didn’t he? One was abstract and neo plastic and the other one was 9 classical, symmetrical with closed corners...He was experimenting. He was already so modern he was ‘post’.”

Souto de Moura acknowledges the Miesian influence, speaking of his Burgo Tower, but refers people to something written by Italian journalist and critic, Francesco Dal Co, “it’s better not to be original, but good, rather than wanting to be very original and bad.”

At a series of forums called the Holcim Forum on sustainable architecture, Souto de Moura stated, “For me, architecture is a global issue. There is no ecological architecture, no intelligent architecture, no sustainable architecture — there is only good architecture. There are always problems we must not neglect; for example, energy, resources, costs, social aspects — one must always pay attention to all these.”

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Published on: April 17, 2019
Cite: "Eduardo Souto de Moura wins 2019 Arnold W. Brunner Memorial Prize" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/eduardo-souto-de-moura-wins-2019-arnold-w-brunner-memorial-prize> ISSN 1139-6415
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