He was born in
Piraeus to parents of
Chiot descent. He inherited his talent in painting from his father, who had an aptitude in the arts. In 1906, he became the first student of Konstantinos Parthenis, a distinguished Greek painter, while he was studying at the
National Technical University of Athens civil engineering, graduating in 1908. He then continued his studies in
Paris and
Munich, in
sculpture and
drawing. In Paris, he attended architecture classes at
Ecole des Beaux Arts (Paris). Pikionis was back then introduced to the work of
Paul Cézanne and became friends with
Giorgio de Chirico. Some Greek painters of the time, such as Georgios Bouzianis and Periklis Giannopoulos, were influential figures during these formative years. He returned to
Greece in 1912 and after the
Balkan Wars, he started studying and working in
architecture during which period, he began shifting his focus on the study of the modern Greek architecture. In 1912, he began to document vernacular architecture on
Aegina, notably the
House of Rodakis, which he brought to greater attention. In 1921, he undertook a lecturer position at the 'Morphology' department at the
National Technical University of Athens where he stayed until 1923. In 1925, he received a permanent position in the department of decoration as a professor. Between 1930 and 1935, he co-published with his good friend, the painter
Hadjikyriakos-Ghikas the magazine '3ο Μάτι' (translated as '3rd Eye') where he published many of his texts. The magazine collaborated with many artists and academics, such as Stratis Doukas, Takis Papatsonis, Sokratis Karantinos and others. His first important work was Moraitis house in Tzitzifies (1921-1923). In 1932, upon the completion of the Elementary School in Pefkakia of Lykavittos, he came to the realisation that his works were not satisfactory and changed his aesthetic perceptions. All of his subsequent architectural works were based on the idea of bridging universalism with regionalism. In the 1940s and 1950s, his architectural creation was limited to designs for graves. However, in the following period, from 1951 to 1957, he was involved in many projects. Among them is the formation of the archaeological site around the Acropolis and Philopappou hill, perhaps his most important work, and the tourist pavilion of St. Demetrios Loubardiaris, seeking its ideal. In 1958, after 35 years of NTUA as a professor, he retired. In 1966 he was elected a full member of the Academy of Athens. He has been often described as a founding father of
critical regionalism by notable architectural historians and theorists, including
Alexander Tzonis &
Liane Lefaivre and
Kenneth Frampton. In 1933, Pikionis with other Greek architects signed the
Athens Charter, a manifesto of the modernist movement which published later by
Le Corbusier. However he didn't embrace completely the new movement. The
leitmotif in his work has been, according to architecture historians,
the epiphany, the contrast between bleached marble and sodden soil. He died in Athens on 28 August 1968. == Legacy ==