Jørn Utzon is a Danish architect, yet he has become indelibly identified with Sydney, Australia, because of his landmark design for the Sydney Opera House. This catalogue for the first major retrospective of his work shows the scope of a career thathas stretched almost 50 years, from his own Hellebæk house (1952) to Can Feliz on Majorca (1994). The essence of Utzon's architecture is a fusion of form and structure--or to put it differently, the structure is the architecture. The sources of his inspiration come mainly from nature and from the visual universes of other cultures like that of the Mayas, which in Utzon's reworking are transformed into an integrated formal idiom, privileging harmony between detail and totality. An interview and numerous essays illuminate the career of an international master, awarded the Pritzker Prize for 2003. Edited by Michael JuHolm, Kjeld Kjeldsen and Mette Marcus. Essays by Poul Tøjner, Kenneth Frampton, Merte Ahnfeldt-Mollerup, Richard Weston, JosephSkrzynski, Philip Nobis, Michael Asgaard Andersen, Hans Munk Hansen, Françoise Fromonot and Rafael Moneo. Paperback, 8.5 x 10 in./96 pgs / 89 color and 49 b&w.