Under the Japan-India Distinguished Visitors Program, I-House will be supporting visits of distinguished Japanese intellectuals to India in developing truly bidirectional exchange. Until now, the program has invited fellows only from India to Japan; henceforth, Japanese experts will also be sent to India.
I-House is honored to have Kazuyo Sejima, one of Japan’s most influential architects today, serve as the first Japanese fellow to visit India under this initiative.
Architecture is one field where Japan has a strong global presence. Japanese architects are well positioned to contribute to stronger ties with India and to offer innovative solutions to shared worldwide challenges, such as disaster management, sustainability, and environmental resilience.
Sejima will deliver lectures in New Delhi and Ahmedabad. Details are as follows:
Lecture 1:“Architecture & the Environment”
- Speaker: Kazuyo SEJIMA (Architect, Founder of SANAA)
- Date: Tuesday, March 17, 2026, 6:00-7:30 pm
- Venue: India International Centre
- Co-organized by: International House of Japan, Shahani Associates, and India International Centre
- *No reservation required. Free Admission


Lecture 2:“Architecture & the Environment”
- Speaker: Kazuyo SEJIMA (Architect, Founder of SANAA)
- Date: Wednesday, March 18, 2026, 6:00-8:00 pm
- Venue: CEPT University
- Co-organized by: International House of Japan, Shahani Associates, and CEPT University
- *No reservation required. Free Admission
About 40 years ago, Kazuyo Sejima began exploring how architecture might create a more seamless relationship between interior and exterior space. Her central question was: What kind of architecture can truly connect people with their surrounding environment? Over the decades, she has come to believe that achieving this connection enables us—those living in the present—to shape new landscapes while honoring the ones that already exist.
Kazuyo SEJIMA (Architect, Founder of SANAA)
Born in Ibaraki Japan, Kazuyo Sejima graduated from the Japan Women’s University in 1981. In 1987 she opened her own studio in Tokyo and then in 1995, together with Ryue Nishizawa, she founded SANAA. Her own works include House in Plum Grove, Inujima Art House project, and Japan Women’s University Mejiro Campus. SANAA’s main works include the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art in Kanazawa, the Rolex Learning Center, Louvre-Lens, Grace Farms, Bocconi University New Urban Campus, La Samaritaine, Art Gallery of New South Wales – Naala Badu Building, Kagawa Prefectural Arena, and Taichung Green Museumbrary. In 2010 Kazuyo Sejima was appointed director of the 12th International Architecture Exhibition of Venice Biennale. Her honors include the Japan Architecture Award, Venice Biennale Golden Lion Award, Rolf Schock Prize in Category of Visual Arts, Pritzker Architecture Prize, Officier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Letters, Prix de l’Équerre d’Argent, the Medal with Purple Ribbon, Thomas Jefferson Medal in Architecture, Praemium Imperiale, Royal Gold Medal, and has chosen for the Person of Cultural Merits. She is currently a professor at the Polytechnic University of Milan, a visiting professor at Japan Women’s University and Osaka University of Arts, an Emeritus Professor at Yokohama National University, and Director of Tokyo Metropolitan Teien Art Museum. Special Session:“The Modernization of Craft and Textiles in Japan”
We will also organize a special session by Yuko Hasegawa—one of Japan’s leading art curators and currently director of the Arts and Design Programs at I-House—in cooperation with the Japan Foundation, New Delhi, as outlined below.
- Speaker: Yuko Hasegawa (Director of the Arts and Design Programs at I-House; Professor Emeritus, Kyoto University)
- Date: Evening of March 16 (time TBA)
- Venue: NIV Art Center, New Delhi
- Co-organized by: International House of Japan, Shahani Associates, Japan Foundation-New Delhi, and NIV Art Center
Yuko Hasegawa (Director of the Arts and Design Programs at I-House; Professor Emeritus, Kyoto University)
Visiting Professor, Graduate School of Management, Kyoto University; Professor Emeritus, Tokyo University of the Arts; Visiting Professor, Research Institute for Humanity and Nature; curator; and art critic. Hasegawa graduated from Kyoto University’s Faculty of Law and received her MFA from the Tokyo University of the Arts. She served as curator at Art Tower Mito, visiting curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art, curator at the Setagaya Art Museum, curator, artistic director, and director of the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa, and curator and counselor at the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo. She has taught at the University of Venice (2023) as a Visiting Professor and engaged as Artistic Director of the Inujima Art House Project. She has been honored with the Chevalier and the Officier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres, France (2015 and 2024), the Ordem de Rio Branco, Brazil (2017), and the Japan Commissioner for Cultural Affairs Award (2020). She has also written, co-authored, and contributed to numerous books, papers, and catalogs, including New Ecology and Art: Anthropocene as Dithering Time (2022). Commemorating the 60th anniversary of Japan-India diplomatic relations in 2012, the Japan-India Distinguished Visitors Program was launched with the hope to strengthen the relationship between the people of both countries. The program invites eminent Indian public figures from various fields who are proposing new values or innovative ideas to change the status quo of society. During their stay for a week, the fellows engage in one public lecture, as well as dialogue and discussions with the counterparts and leaders who are tackling similar issues in Japan in their area of expertise.

