Chinese architect I.M. Pei with Pei Partnership Architects recently designed the Suzhou Museum in
the city’s historic district 100 miles northwest of Shanghai. The
building adjoins the 19th century Zhong Wang Fu complex and the
UNESCO-listed 16th century Garden of the Administrator.
Architecture and landscape become interrelated as a series of gardens
and courtyards flow in and from the building itself. While a high wall
visually separates the museum’s main garden from the adjacent ancient
garden, a stream of water connected by a footbridge joins the two
properties together. The gardens, however, are not modeled after their
ancient counterpart. Pei yearns to establish a contemporary form of
Chinese landscape design.
The interior space unfolds into a series of spaces made up of varying
heights and geometric shapes. The collection consists of a mix of
ancient and modern art – relics from Ming and Qing dynasties as well as
contemporary exhibitions.
Pei deliberately built a modern structure while capturing the subtle
yet expressive Chinese spirit. The building’s exterior, with its white
walls and gray tiled roof not only respects the traditional
color-scheme used throughout the city of Suzhou, but also provides a
backdrop further emphasizing the importance of the gardens. In
his museum, Pei hopes to foster and inspire a new generation of
thinking about Chinese-specific modern architecture and design. By Andrew J Wierner. (Pics: Kerun Ip)