Wajiro Kon
Japanese architect
Intro | Japanese architect | |
Places | Japan | |
was | Architect Sociologist | |
Work field | Engineering Social science | |
Gender |
| |
Birth | 1 January 1888 | |
Death | 1 January 1973 (aged 85 years) |
Wajiro Kon (今和次郎, Kon Wajirō, 10 July 1888 – 27 October 1973) was a Japanese architect, designer, and educator. He is renowned as the father of "modernology", a branch of sociology which studied the changes in cityscape and people which emerged as a consequence of Tokyo becoming a modern metropolis in the early Showa Era.
Born in Hirosaki, Kon studied graphic design at Tokyo University of the Arts, and worked with artists and ethnographers. In the 1920s he studied rural Japan with the ethnographer Kunio Yanagita. After the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake he turned his attention to urban life, recording post-disaster conditions in Tokyo.