In 1988, then-French president Francois Mitterrand inducted Pei as a Chevalier in the Legion d'Honneur, later raising him to the rank of Officier when Phase II of the glass-and-stainless steel Grand Louvre pyramid was completed in 1993. He was also one of 12 naturalised US citizens then-president Ronald Reagan awarded the Medal of Liberty in 1986. Three years later he became Chancellor of the Academy, the first architect to hold the position.
In 1975, Pei was elected to the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. He dedicated the $100,000 prize money he was awarded as laureate of the Pritzker Architecture Prize to setting up a scholarship fund for Chinese students to study the craft in the United States, on the condition they return home to design and build. Pei dedicated energetic efforts through the years to supporting the arts and education, serving on visiting committees at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, Harvard and MIT as well as a range of US government panels including the National Council on the Humanities and National Council on the Arts. Kennedy Library in Boston, Massachusetts.ĭespite being a confessed Islamic art novice, he was also commissioned to design the Museum of Islamic Art in Doha, Qatar, which opened in 2008 to great fanfare. His revered projects include the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland, Ohio the Miho Museum of Shigo, Japan the Morton Meyerson Symphony Center in Dallas, Texas, and The John F.
He became a naturalised US citizen in 1954. He then enrolled in Harvard University's Graduate School of Design, where he received a master's degree in architecture in 1946. "A lasting architecture has to have roots."īorn in China in 1917, banker's son Ieoh Ming Pei came to the US at 17 to study architecture, receiving an undergraduate degree in the field from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1940. But I don't want to forget the beginning." "I understand that times have changed, we have evolved. There is a certain concern for history but it is not very deep," Pei told The New York Times in a 2008 interview. "Contemporary architects tend to impose modernity on something. In his adopted home country the United States, Pei became perhaps best known for his landmark East Building at Washington's National Gallery of Art, deftly melding sharp modern angles with the monumental grandeur the US capital is known for. The New York Times, citing Pei's son Li Chung, said the architect had died overnight Wednesday into Thursday. Pei Partnership Architects confirmed Pei's death to AFP. The Chinese-born Pei was the mastermind behind the bold Louvre pyramid in Paris, the landmark 72-story Bank of China tower in Hong Kong and Athens' Museum of Modern Art, works seen as embracing modernity tempered by a grounding in history. Pei, the preeminent US architect who forged a distinct brand of modern building design with his sharp lines and stark structures, has died in New York, his sons' architecture firm said Thursday.