Niemeyer, Oscar (1907-2012)
Born in Rio de Janeiro - at the time, the capital city of Brazil - the architect studied at the National School Fine Arts in Brazil and began to work in the office of Lúcio Costa in 1935. The following year, 1936, and for seven years, he was part of the team that, in collaboration with Le Corbusier, was responsible for the design of the Ministry of Education and the Public Health Buildings of the capital (Rio de Janeiro). In 1939, still with Lúcio Costa, he designed the Brazilian Pavilion at the New York World Fair. Later, he became the coordinator and chief architect responsible for the development of Brasília. A member of the Communist Party of Brazil, Niemeyer was forced into exile in France, in 1964, due to the Brazilian political situation. He was awarded the Lenin Peace Prize in 1963. In 1970, he was awarded the Gold Medal of the American Institute of Architecture and, in 1988, he shared the Pritzker Architecture Prize with Gordon Bunshaft.
Onde Niemeyer estudou?
a) National School of Fine Arts.
b) Lúcio Costa
c) Ministry of Education
d) New York World Fair
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Resposta:
a) National School of Fine Arts
Explicação:
¨the architect studied at the National School Fine Arts in Brazil¨ Parte do texto onde justifica essa resposta.
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