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  1. www.tclf.org › pioneer › hideo-sasakiHideo Sasaki | TCLF

    Hideo Sasaki. Pioneer Information. Born in Reedley, California, Sasaki studied landscape architecture at the University of Illinois, where he counted Stanley White amongst his influential teachers, and graduated from Harvard’s Graduate School of Design, then led by Walter Gropius, in 1948.

  2. www.sasaki.com › practice › historyHistorySasaki

    As chairman of Harvards Landscape Architecture Department from 1958 until 1968, Hideo helped revolutionize the study of landscape architecture by tying it to the larger issues of planning, blurring the lines between departments, and breaking down the traditional barriers between practice and teaching.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hideo_SasakiHideo Sasaki - Wikipedia

    Hideo Sasaki (25 November 1919 – 30 August 2000) was a Japanese American landscape architect.

  4. Hideo Sasai is known as an Producer and Executive Producer. Some of their work includes Stray Cat Rock: Wild Jumbo, The Beasts' Carnival, The Rocking Horsemen, Sweet Revenge, The Izu Dancer, Love in the Mud, The Visitor in the Eye, and The Surf.

  5. www.imdb.com › name › nm0765770Hideo Sasai - IMDb

    Hideo Sasai is known for Izu no odoriko (1974), Stray Cat Rock: Beat '71 (1971) and The Visitor in the Eye (1977).

  6. Oct 22, 2019 · Hideo Sasaki was an early pioneer of collaborative, cross-disciplinary design practice in the 1950s, which informed the way today’s broader design industry thinks about how a plan, site, and building all intersect to create a cohesive built design.

  7. Hideo deliberately assumed the role of a collaborator rather than a domineering master designera partner in the reimagining of space. In the words of one of his close collaborators, he had “little patience for unilateral thinking,” instead always striving to blend expertise across disciplines.