On Friday, October 16, 2020, the Basel gallery SAM (Swiss Architecture Museum) hosted the opening of the exhibition Archaeology of the Future featuring the work of Japanese architect Tsuyoshi Tane, who has been based in Paris for a long time. Tane gained wider recognition in 2006 when he, together with his then colleagues Dan Dorrell and Lisa Gotmeh, won an international competition for the Estonian National Museum in Tartu. The Basel exhibition was originally planned for the spring of this year, where it was to move after a successful reprise last year at the Japan House (designed by Kengo Kuma, 2017) in São Paulo, Brazil. The exhibition premiered in 2018 simultaneously at two locations, Tokyo Opera City Art Gallery and TOTO Gallery in Tane's hometown of Tokyo. As part of the Basel exhibition, which will last until the end of February next year, there will also be guided tours, lectures, and a symposium. On November 26, an author lecture will take place, and on February 4, 2021, a symposium with Tane along with Emanuel Christ and Catherine Gay will be held. Tsuyoshi Tane believes that architecture is part of the memory of a place. His concept of Archaeology of the Future connects local history with architecture to create an environment for the future. He studied architecture at Hokkaido Tokai University. He gained work experience at the London studio of David Adjaye and the Copenhagen office of Henning Larsen. In 2006, he founded the studio DGT (dorell ghotmeh tane/architects) in Paris. In 2017, he established his own studio ATTA (Atelier Tsuyoshi Tane Architects) in Paris. He received recognition from ICON magazine as one of the 20 essential young architects and was named Architect of the Year by Nikkei Architecture in 2019. He was a visiting research fellow at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen, taught at Columbia University in New York in 2012, and served as a visiting professor at ESVMD in 2014. In 2020, he became a member of the TOTO Gallery Council in Tokyo.
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