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I. M. Pei's Place Ville-Marie in Montreal
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Ieoh Ming Pei (貝聿銘
pinyin bei4 yu4 ming2) is a Chinese
architect born in
Canton,
China on
April 26,
1917.
Pei, the last "master" of high modernist[?] architecture, has been described as an architect who focuses on abstract form. He prefers materials such as stone, concrete, glass, and steel.
While Pei is one of the most successful 20th century architects in the world, with numerous landmark buildings and extensions to his name, his work has had little influence on architectural theory.
- 1961 - 1967 National Center for Atmospheric Research[?], in Boulder, Colorado
- 1962 - Place Ville-Marie[?], in Montreal, Canada
- 1968 - 1974 Christian Science Center[?], in Boston, Massachusetts
- 1968 - Everson Museum of Art[?], in Syracuse, New York
- 1969 - Cleo Rogers Memorial Library[?], in Columbus, Indiana
- 1969 - 1975 John Hancock Center in Chicago, Illinois
- 1971 - Harbor Towers[?]
- 1972 - Dallas City Hall[?]
- 1974 - 1978 East Wing, National Gallery of Art[?], in Washington, D.C.
- 1977 - Hancock Place, in Boston, Massachusetts
- 1979 - 1986 Javits Convention Center[?] in New York, New York
- 1973 - Johnson Museum of Art[?], Cornell University, in Ithaca, New York
- 1982 - 1990 Bank of China Tower, in Hong Kong
- 1989 - Pyramide du Louvre[?], in Paris, France
- 1998 - Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, in Cleveland, Ohio.
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