'Oscar Ribeiro de Almeida Niemeyer Soares Filho' (born
December 15,
1907) is a
Brazilian
architect who is considered one of the most important names in international
modern architecture. He was a pioneer in the exploration of the constructive possibilities of
reinforced concrete.
Although he was a defender of
utilitarianism, his creations did not have the blocky coldness frequently criticized by
post-modern critics. His buildings have forms so dynamic and curves so sensual that many admirers say that, more than an
architect, he is a
sculptor of monuments, a trait some critics consider to be a defect.
Oscar Niemeyer and his contribution to the construction of the city of
Brasília is portrayed and somewhat
parodied in the
1964 French movie ''
L'homme de Rio'' (''That Man From Rio''), starring
Jean-Paul Belmondo.
Early life
Oscar Niemeyer was born in the city of
Rio de Janeiro in
1907 in
Laranjeiras neighborhood, on a street that later would receive the name of his grandfather
Ribeiro de Almeida. He spent his youth as a typical young
Carioca of the time:
bohemian and relatively unconcerned with his future. He concluded his secondary education at age 21. The same year, he married Annita Baldo, daughter of
Italian immigrants from
Padua. Marriage gave him a sense of responsibility: he decided to work and enter university.
He started to work in his father's
typography house and entered the
Escola de Belas Artes (Brazil), from which he graduated as
engineer architect in
1934. At the time he had financial difficulties but decided to work without fee anyway, in the architecture studio of
Lúcio Costa and
Carlos Leão. He felt unsatisfied with the architecture that he saw in the streets and believed he could find a career there.
In
1945, already an
architect of some repute, he joined the
Brazilian Communist Party. Niemeyer was a boy at the time of the
Russian Revolution of 1917, and by the
Second World War he became a young idealist. He was an enthusiastic communist, a position which would cost him much later in his life. During the
military dictatorship of Brazil his office was raided and he was forced into exile in Europe. The Minister of Aeronautics of the time reportedly said that "the place for a communist architect is
Moscow." He visited the
USSR, met with diverse socialist leaders and became a personal friend of some of them.
Fidel Castro once said: "Niemeyer and I are the last Communists of this planet."
First works
In
1936, Lúcio Costa was appointed by Education Minister Gustavo Capanema architect of the new headquarters for the Ministry of Education and Public Health in
Rio de Janeiro. In 1939, Niemeyer assumed the leadership of the team of architects (Lúcio Costa, Carlos Leão, Affonso Eduardo Reidy, Jorge Moreira, Ernani Vasconcellos and Oscar Niemeyer, with
Le Corbusier acting as a consultant in 1936) responsible for the Ministry that had assumed the task of shaping the ‘novo homem, Brasileiro e moderno’ (new man, Brazilian and modern).

Oscar Niemeyer
Following Niemeyer's request, it was renamed Palácio Gustavo Capanema in 1985. It was the first state-sponsored
modernist skyscraper in the world, and of a much larger scale than anything Le Corbusier had built until then. Completed in
1943, the building which housed the regulator and manager of Brazilian culture and cultural heritage developed all the elements of what was to become recognised as
Brazilian modernist movement: it employed local materials and techniques, like the
azulejos linked to the Portuguese tradition; the revolutionised Corbusian
brises-soleil, made adjustable and related to the Moorish shading devices of colonial architecture; bold colours; the tropical gardens of
Roberto Burle Marx; the Imperial Palm (roystonea oleraceæ), known as the Brazilian order; further allusions to the icons of the Brazilian landscape; and the integrated, specially commissioned works of Brazilian artists.
In
1939 Niemeyer with Lúcio Costa designed the Brazilian pavilion at the
New York World's Fair (executed in collaboration with Paul Lester Wiener). Impressed by the executed Pavilion, Mayor Fiorello La Guardia awarded Niemeyer the keys of the city of New York. Costa explained that the Brazilian Pavilion adopted a language of ‘grace and elegance’, lightness and spatial fluidity, open plan, curves and free walls, which he termed ‘Ionic’, contrasting it to the contemporaneous stern Modernist architecture, which he termed ‘Doric’. By mid-twentieth century, Brazilian architectural Modernism had been recognised as the ‘first national style in modern architecture’ (Reyner Bahnam). The international architectural periodicals of the 1940s and 1950s dedicated hundreds of dithyrambic pages to the ‘chosen land of the most original and most audacious contemporary architecture’, followed by monographs on individual architects like Oscar Niemeyer and Affonso Eduardo Reidy.
The Pampulha project
In
1940 Niemeyer met
Juscelino Kubitschek, who was at the time the mayor of
Belo Horizonte, capital of the
state of Minas Gerais. He and Minas Gerais Governor Benedito Valadares wanted to develop a new suburb to the north of the city called
Pampulha, and commissioned Niemeyer to design a series of buildings to be known as the "Pampulha complex". Brazil’s first listed modern monument was Niemeyer’s Pampulha Church of São Francisco de Assis, in Pampulha, made part of the national high art canon in 1943, one year after its completion. The Pampulha complex included a casino, a dance hall and restaurant, a yacht club, a golf club, and a 100 room hotel (unbuilt), distributed around the artificial lake. A weekend retreat for the Mayor was also constructed near the lake.

São Francisco de Assis Church,Belo Horizonte City, Minas Gerais, Brazil
★
Church 3D in Google Earth
The buildings were completed in
1943, and provoked some controversy. They received international acclaim following the 1943 ‘Brazil Builds’ exhibition, at the New York Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). The conservative Church authorities of Minas Gerais refused to consecrate the
Church of Saint Francis of Assis until 1959, in part because of its unorthodox form, in part because of the altar
mural painted by
Candido Portinari. The mural depicts Christ as the saviour of the ill, the poor and, most importantly, the sinner.
Pampulha, says Niemeyer, offered him the opportunity to 'challenge the monotony of contemporary architecture, the wave of misinterpreted functionalism that hindered it, and the dogmas of form and function that had emerged, counteracting the plastic freedom that reinforced concrete introduced. I was attracted by the curve – the liberated, sensual curve suggested by the possibilities of new technology yet so often recalled in venerable old baroque churches. […] I deliberately disregarded the right angle and rationalist architecture designed with ruler and square to boldly enter the world of curves and straight lines offered by reinforced concrete. […] This deliberate protest arose from the environment in which I lived, with its white beaches, its huge mountains, its old baroque churches, and the beautiful suntanned women.' (Niemeyer, Oscar, 2000, The Curves of Time: The Memoirs of Oscar Niemeyer (London: Phaidon), pp. 62 and 169-70).
The 1940s and 1950s
In
1947, his world-wide recognition was confirmed when Niemeyer travelled to the
United States to be part of the international team (Board of Design) working on the design of the
headquarters of the
United Nations Headquarters in
New York. Niemeyer's 'scheme 32' was approved by the Board of Design, but he eventually gave in to pressure by Le Corbusier, and together they submitted project 23/32 (developed with Bodiansky and Weissmann), which combined elements from Niemeyer's and Le Corbusier's schemes, but was primarily based on Niemeyer's scheme. Despite Le Corbusier’s insistence to remain involved, the conceptual design for the United Nations Headquarters (scheme 23/32), approved by the Board, was carried forward by the Director of Planning, Wallace Harrison, and Max Abramovitz, then a partnership. In the previous year Niemeyer had received an invitation to teach at
Yale University; however, his visa was denied. In 1950 the first book about his work was published in the USA by
Stamo Papadaki. In 1953, Niemeyer was selected for the position of Dean of the Harvard Graduate School of Design. But his Communist Party membership meant that, for the second time, he was refused a visa to enter the United States, and take his position at the university Richard Nixon had dubbed the ‘Kremlin on the Charles’.
In Brazil, he designed
São Paulo's
Ibirapuera Park (for the celebrations of the city's 400th anniversary)
1951, the
Copan apartment building (1953-66), and the
JK Building in Belo Horizonte (1951). In 1952-53 he built his own house in
Rio de Janeiro, the House at Canoas (''
Casa das Canoas''), undoubtedly his domestic masterpiece, and in 1954-60 the Niemeyer luxury apartment building, in Belo Horizonte.
In 1954-55 Niemeyer designed the Museum of Modern Art of Caracas (MAM Caracas). According to him, this project marked a new direction his work was beginning to take, exemplified by his government buildings for Brasilia.
It was at the Canoas House that a euphoric Juscelino Kubitschek visited Niemeyer one September morning of 1956, soon after he assumed the Brazilian presidency. While driving back to the city, the politician ‘eagerly’ spoke to the architect about his most audacious scheme: ‘I am going to build a new capital for this country and I want you to help me […] Oscar, this time we are going to build the capital of Brazil.’ (Niemeyer, Oscar, 2000a, The Curves of Time: The Memoirs of Oscar Niemeyer (London: Phaidon), p. 70).
Brasília

National Congress of Brazil, Brasília
Niemeyer organized a competition for the lay-out of
Brasília, the new capital, and the winner was the project of his old master and great friend, Lúcio Costa. Niemeyer would design the buildings and Lucio the plan of the city.
In the space of a few months, Niemeyer designed a large number of residential, commercial and government buildings. Among them were the residence of the President (''Palácio da Alvorada''), the House of the deputy, the
National Congress, the
Cathedral of Brasília (a
hyperboloid structure), diverse ministries, not to mention residential buildings. Viewed from above, the city can be seen to have elements that repeat themselves in every building, giving it a formal unity. The cathedral of Brasília is especially beautiful, with diverse modern symbolism. Its entrance is a dimly-lit corridor that contrasts with the bright, naturally illuminated hall.
Behind the construction of Brasília lay a monumental campaign to construct an entire city in the barren center of the country, thousands of kilometers from any major city. The brainchild of Kubitschek, his aims included stimulating the national industry, integrating the country's distant areas, populating inhospitable regions, and bringing progress to a region where only cattle ranching had a foothold (many historians compare the construction of Brasília with the American colonization of its west). Niemeyer and Lúcio Costa used it to test new concepts of city planning: streets without transit (Niemeyer would say that it is a disrespect to the human being that it takes more than 20 minutes in the transport of a region to another one), buildings floating off the ground supported by columns and allowing the space underneath to be free and integrated with nature.
The project also had a socialist ideology: in Brasília all the apartments would be owned by the government and rented to its employees. Brasília did not have "nobler" regions, meaning that top ministers and common laborers would share the same building. Of course many of these concepts were ignored or changed by other presidents with different visions in later years. Brasília was designed, constructed, and inaugurated within four years. After it, Niemeyer was nominated head chief of the college of architecture of the
University of Brasília. In
1963, he became an honorary member of the
American Institute of Architects in the United States; the same year, he received a Soviet prize, the
Lenin peace prize.
In
1964, after being invited by
Abba Hushi, the mayor of
Haifa,
Israel, to plan the campus of the
University of Haifa, he came back to a completely different Brazil. In March president
João Goulart, who succeeded president
Jânio Quadros in 1961, was deposed in a
military coup. General
Castello Branco assumed command of the country, which would remain a dictatorship until 1985.
Exile and projects overseas
The leftist position of Niemeyer would cost him much during the military dictatorship. His office was pillaged, the headquarters of the magazine he coordinated was destroyed, his projects mysteriously began to be refused and clients disappeared.
In
1965, two hundred professors asked for his resignation from the University of Brasília, in protest against the government treatment of universities. In the same year he traveled to
France for an exhibition in the
Louvre museum.
In the following year, his work hindered in Brazil, Niemeyer moved to
Paris. There he started a new phase of his life and workmanship. He opened an office on the
Champs-Élysées, and had customers in diverse countries, especially in
Algeria where, among others he designed the
University of Constantine. In Paris he created the headquarters of the French Communist Party (
photos),
Place du Colonel Fabien, and in
Italy that of the
Mondadori publishing company. In
Funchal on Madeira, a 19th century hotel was removed to build a casino by Niemeyer. Another prominent design of his was the
Penang State Mosque in
George Town the state capital of
Penang,
Malaysia in 1970s.
1980s to the present

Brazil's National Museum, Brasilia, D.F.

Oscar Niemeyer Museum (NovoMuseu), Curitiba, Brazil
The dictatorship lasted 21 years, until 1985. Under
João Figueiredo's rule it softened and gradually turned into a democracy. At this time Niemeyer decided to return to his country. He himself defines this time as the beginning of the last phase of his life. During that decade he made the
Memorial Juscelino Kubitschek (
1980), the
Pantheon (
1985) and the
Latin America Memorial (
1987), the last a beautiful sculpture representing the wounded hand of
Jesus, whose wound bleeds in the shape of
Central and
South America.
In
1988 Oscar Niemeyer was awarded the
Pritzker Architecture Prize, together with the American architect
Gordon Bunshaft.
He designed at least two more buildings in Brasilia, small ones, the
Memorial dos Povos Indigenas ("Memorial for the Indigenous People") and the
Catedral Militar, Igreja de N.S. da Paz.
In
1996, at 89 years old, he created what many consider his greatest work: the
Niterói Contemporary Art Museum (in the city of Niterói, a city next to Rio de Janeiro). The building flies from a rock, giving a beautiful view of the
Guanabara Bay and the city of Rio de Janeiro. Critics of the museum say the building is so exotic that it upstages the works of art inside it.
In
2003, Niemeyer was called to design the
Serpentine Gallery Summer Pavilion in Hyde Park
London, a gallery that each year invites a famous architect who has never previously built in the UK, to design this temporary structure.
On
December 10 2004, a Niemeyer designed tombstone for Communist
Carlos Marighella, in
Salvador da Bahia in the north-east of Brazil, was inaugurated to comemorate the 35th anniversary of his death.
In 2005, one of his projects entitled "ESTAÇÃO CIÊNCIA, CULTURA e ARTES" was approved to be built at
Joao Pessoa, the easternmost point of the
Americas, at 34º 47' 38" west longitude and 7º 9' 28" south latitude
[1] (in
Portuguese).
In 2006, Niemeyer (98) wed longtime aide Vera Lucia Cabreira (60) at his apartment in Rio de Janeiro's Ipanema district a month after fracturing his hip in a fall.
On December, 15th, 2006, almost 50 years belatedly, Brasilia gained a couple of Niemeyer's buildings, the National Museum and the National Library. The inauguration coincided with Oscar Niemeyer 99th aniversary. Both buildings are located at the "Esplanada dos Ministérios", making part of the Republic Cultural Complex, next to Niemeyer's Cathedral.
Today, Niemeyer is over 99 and still involved in diverse projects, mainly sculptures and readjustments of old works of his that, protected by national (and some cases international) historic heritage regulations, can only be modified by him. He is currently designing a statue showing a tiger with its mouth open and a man fighting it raising the Cuban flag against the US blockade of Cuba.
References
Niemeyer, Oscar, 2000, The Curves of Time: The Memoirs of Oscar Niemeyer (London: Phaidon).
External links
★
Honored with a Lenin Peace Prize in 1963
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Oscar Niemeyer Museum (in
Portuguese)
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May 2006 Interview with Niermeyer, age 98, in Metropolis Magazine
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Oscar Niemeyer, A Legend of Modernism, a book
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Niemeyer in Brasília history
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Contemporary Art Museum Niteroi.
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Oscar Niemeyer's Strick House in Santa Monica
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JK Building, Belo Horizonte, Brazil
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Pritzker Prize 1988
★ Images of
The Museum of Contemporary Art, Niteroi,
Cathedral of Brasilia, and
Memorial dos Povos Indigenas (Memorial for the Indigenous People)
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Oscar Niemeyer group on Flickr
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Pampulha church in Google Earth