Oscar Niemeyer

Oscar Niemeyer

Oscar Niemeyer Obituary

Published by Legacy Remembers on Dec. 5, 2012.
RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Architect Oscar Niemeyer, who recreated Brazil's sensuous curves in reinforced concrete and built the capital of Brasilia on the empty central plains as a symbol of the nation's future, died on Wednesday. He was 104.

Elisa Barboux, a spokeswoman for the Hospital Samaritano in Rio de Janeiro, confirmed Niemeyer's death and said the cause was a respiratory infection. He had been hospitalized for several weeks and also on separate occasions earlier this year, suffering from kidney problems, pneumonia and dehydration.

Dr. Fernando Gjorup, Niemeyer's physician, said the architect worked on pending projects in the days before his death, taking visits from engineers and other professionals.

"The most impressive thing is that his body suffered but his mind was lucid," Gjorup said at a press conference. "He didn't talk about death, never talked about death. He talked about life."

In works from Brasilia's crown-shaped cathedral to the undulating French Communist Party building in Paris, Niemeyer shunned the steel-box structures of many modernist architects, finding inspiration in nature's crescents and spirals. His hallmarks include much of the United Nations complex in New York and the Museum of Modern Art in Niteroi, which is perched like a flying saucer across Guanabara Bay from Rio de Janeiro.

"Right angles don't attract me. Nor straight, hard and inflexible lines created by man," he wrote in his 1998 memoir "The Curves of Time." ''What attracts me are free and sensual curves. The curves we find in mountains, in the waves of the sea, in the body of the woman we love."

His curves give sweep and grace to Brasilia, the city that opened up Brazil's vast interior in the 1960s and moved the nation's capital from coastal Rio.

Niemeyer designed most of the city's important buildings, while French-born, avant-garde architect Lucio Costa crafted its distinctive airplane-like layout. Niemeyer left his mark in the flowing concrete of the Cabinet ministries and the monumental dome of the national museum.

As the city grew to 2 million, critics said it lacked "soul" as well as street corners, "a utopian horror," in the words of art critic Robert Hughes.

Niemeyer shrugged off the criticism.

"If you go to Brasilia you might not like it, say there's something better, but there's nothing just like it," he said in an interview with O Globo newspaper in 2006 at age 98. "I search for surprise in my architecture. A work of art should cause the emotion of newness."

Even late in life, Niemeyer was striving for renewal. In 2009, he came under heavy criticism for proposing to build a "Plaza of Sovereignty" in the heart of Brasilia.

Preservationists said the 330-foot-tall (100-meter) obelisk he envisioned would mar the very skyline the architect created a half-century earlier. Niemeyer relented on the plaza, only to unveil new plans for a 165-foot-tall (50-meter) tower in the same spot.

Living well past the century mark, Niemeyer's journey mirrored that of his beloved Brazil, and his restless modernism captured the developing country's sweeping ambitions.

With hundreds of his buildings dotting the landscape, arguably no other architect shared as tight a bond with a country as Niemeyer did with Brazil.

Oscar Niemeyer Soares Filho was born on Dec. 15, 1907, in Rio de Janeiro, and earned his architecture degree at Rio's School of Fine Arts.

Working in Costa's office in 1936, he helped design a Rio education ministry building that was a classic of functionalist horizontal and vertical lines. With modernist giant Le Corbusier, Niemeyer developed the "brise soleil," a heat protector that enhanced the building's grid design and became an architectural standard in the 1960s.

Niemeyer teamed up again with Le Corbusier in 1947 to design much of the United Nations complex in New York. After months of squabbling with architects — most notably Le Corbusier — Niemeyer came up with the final plan for the complex, including the Secretariat, General Assembly and conference buildings and the Dag Hammarskjold Library.

But Niemeyer already was chafing at the limits of form-follows-function architecture.

His first solo project was the Pampulha complex of buildings set on an artificial lake in the central Brazilian city of Belo Horizonte, now Brazil's third-largest metro area. For the first time, Niemeyer employed the curves and arches that would become his hallmark.

Not everyone was pleased. The St. Francis church, built in a series of parabolic arches resembling waves, was shunned for years by Catholics who considered it an offense to Christianity. Finished in 1944, the church wasn't inaugurated as a place of worship until the late 1950s. "If you examine Pampulha, you will feel the freedom of the forms used there," Niemeyer said. "In the lightness of the exposed structure, you will sense that something new sprang up in Brazilian architecture."

In the 1950s, Niemeyer was summoned by President Juscelino Kubitschek to design a new capital on Brazil's empty central high plains. Costa became the project's urban planner.

With the slogan of "50 years in five," Kubitschek hoped to prod Brazil into a great leap forward — and inward, away from the coast.

Niemeyer rose to the challenge, testing new forms and technical limits for reinforced concrete. His cone-shaped Metropolitan Cathedral is a circle of curved concrete pillars set like tepee poles with glass mosaic in between.

"I didn't want an old-style cathedral — dark, a reminder of sin," he said in an interview in the 1990s. "I wanted something happier."

Perhaps his best-known creation was the National Congress building, designed as two giant white bowls, one facing up and another facing down, with twin 330-foot-tall (100-meter) towers rising between them.

In 1987, UNESCO declared Brasilia a World Heritage Landmark.

"If you pick up the pencil thinking only of the solution, you will draw without an idea. What's important in architecture is intuition," he said. "I have my system of work ... based on fantasy, but always feeling logical."

After a 1964 coup plunged Brazil into a 21-year military dictatorship, Niemeyer, a lifelong communist, decided to spend more time in Europe than Brazil. While living in France in 1965, he designed the headquarters of the French Communist Party. During the dictatorship he also designed the center of the Mondadori publishing house in Italy, Constantine University in Algeria and other projects in Israel, Lebanon, Germany and Portugal.

He won the Gold Medal from the American Institute of Architecture in 1970, the Pritzker Architecture Prize from Chicago's Hyatt Foundation in 1988 and the Gold Medal of the Royal Institute of British Architects in 1998.

After 1974, Niemeyer turned his attention again to Brazil. In 1984, Rio inaugurated the 60,000-seat Sambadrome he designed for Rio's annual Carnival parade, and hundreds of graceful concrete public schools based on his prefabricated model.

Although he never liked flying and gradually stopped traveling by air, Niemeyer never ceased working. He also never abandoned his faith in communism, befriending Cuban leader Fidel Castro. His Brasilia monument to Kubitschek, a statue in an elevated curve of stone, was criticized by the military regime for its similarity to the communist hammer-and-sickle.

In a 2006 article for the Brazilian daily Folha de S. Paulo, Niemeyer wrote: "Life is more important than architecture. ... One day the world will be more just and will take life to a superior stage, no longer limited to governments and dominant classes."

Hunched over and walking slowly, he went to his office daily, designing and following his projects by videoconference.

Until the end, he embraced architecture as a humanist endeavor and rejected criticism that his buildings were more enjoyable to look at than to live or work in.

"The architect ... must feel that human beings also are important," he said. "Because nothing (else) is important. Life lasts but a minute."

Associated Press writer Jenny Barchfield and APTN producer Renata Brito contributed to this report.

BRADLEY BROOKS, Associated Press



Copyright © 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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24 Entries

January 12, 2013

To the Niemeyer Family,

Celebrating a life well lived, but still gone much too soon.
Seventy years is our life span, eighty years with special mightiness-Psalms 90:10 Boy did he have a long life span to reach the age of 104-wow!

Cling to the many memories and let them heal your broken hearts and put a smile on all your faces.

Psalms 46:1-"God is for us a refuge and a strength...refuge found when we are distress".

Oscar is gone but never forgotten by all who knew and loved him very much!

The Grants

January 12, 2013

Our thoughts and prayers are with you in your time of grief. May your memories bring you comfort.

December 19, 2012

MAY THE GOD OF PEACE TOUCH THE HEART OF THE NIEMEYER FAMILY,MAY THEY BE REMINDED OF THE COMFORT THAT COMES FROM {MATT.5:8}HAPPY ARE THE PURE IN HEART,SINCE THEY SHALL SEE GOD."....QD

A. Ingram

December 10, 2012

Our Heavenly Father knows that losing a loved one to death causes us great pain. He will be with you during this time of deep sorrow.

Erica Jekanowski

December 10, 2012

My prayers to your family, I lived in Brasilia in 1991 and thought it was an amazing city...thank you Oscar.

Sandra Wise

December 9, 2012

Vá com Deus, em paz, na terra como no céu.

Jan Gorlach

December 9, 2012

Your spirit will be allways with us.

JACQUELINE HOLGUIN HOLLOWAY

December 8, 2012

MY CONDOLENCES GO OUT TO MR OSCAR NIEMEYER, LORD HAS CALLED ON A NEW ANGEL, TO JOIN HIM TO SIT BY HIS THROWN, OH WHAT A WONDERFUL HE LIFE HE HAD AND HIS BELIEVES WHERE GREAT AND IS A LEGENED TO ALL OF US, MAY HE REST IN PEACE. JACQUELINE HOLGUIN HOLLOWAY

December 8, 2012

Mr. Oscar accomplished much in his life. It was truly a blessing that he was able to live for so long.

Karen Caldwell

December 8, 2012

To the Niemeyer family,

When God The Most High saw you getting tired
He put his arms around you
And whispered come rest
He didn't like what you were going through
so he gave you peace and rest
Your life was beautiful with your family
He only takes the best at heart
And when he saw you sleeping
So peaceful he freed you from your pain
We wouldn't wish you back to continue as you were
To suffer that again
So we say goodbye with good memories of you
And as you take your final rest
We know that you loved us all,and when you are weak at heart remember Ps.46:1.
Because you are all the the best thing that has happen in my LIFE!

December 8, 2012

My condolences to the Niemeyer family. Praying that your family has comfort & hope during this difficult time of loss. (Romans 15:33)

Marc Forman. M.D.

December 8, 2012

Andre Malraux said that Itamaraty was the first palace since the Renaissance

Bankston

December 8, 2012

Our condolences go out to the Niemeyer family.May you draw close to God during this difficult time and he will draw close to you (James 4:8).

Billie Edwards

December 7, 2012

What a blessed great person. Rest in peace. Thoughts and prayers.

Bhaskar Sathe

December 7, 2012

Exceptionally great Architect, superior
blend of F.L.Wright and Corbusuer.
Long live Creativity in his name. May God bless him.

Fred Bisharat

December 6, 2012

Oscar was my idol at the begining of my career in architecture. I always respected his drive and perseverance to forge ahead with new ideas. His legacy is a wonder for all time. We miss him as part of us had died with him.
Alfred H. Bisharat

Lottie Doskey

December 6, 2012

One amazing individual. Heaven will be blessed.

December 6, 2012

May you find comfort in the Hearer of prayer at this time. Psalm 65:2

T B

December 6, 2012

Although my political views differed from his, I admired his BRILLIANT mind and sense of beauty. His creations never disappointed! What an amazing and long life. My condolences to his family and friends. It is never easy losing a visionary.

Maria Godbout

December 6, 2012

Niemeyer resgatou o Orgulho do povo brasileiro, com sua arte e sua inteligencia mostrou ao mundo a capacidade do nosso povo .Rest in Peace. Sua missao foi cumprida .

Lawson

December 6, 2012

Eu espero que você vai ganhar o conforto das palavras na Bíblia em João 5:28,29 e Isaías 33:24 . Nosso amoroso Deus não quer sofrer. Ele vai eliminar as coisas que nos causam tristeza.

December 6, 2012

To the the family of Oscar Niemeyer - May God give you peace and comfort through his word and the Lord Jesus Christ during this time of sorrow, I know that he will be missed by many.

kimtraila williams

December 5, 2012

To: Mr. Niemeyer family,
May the love of those around you help you through the days ahead.

May the peace which comes from the memories of love shared, comfort you now and in the days ahead.


May your heart and soul find peace and comfort.


May all get the strength to cope with the bereavement.
I pray for his soul to rest in peace.
God Bless, and God Bless America,
Kimtraila Williams

December 5, 2012

RIP

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