MoMA initiated their series of "House in the Garden" exhibitions in the courtyard of the Museum in 1949. Architectural director
Philip Johnson and curator
Arthur Drexler recognized the correspondence between
modernism in the Western house and traditional Japanese architecture and proposed to build a Japanese house as the third exhibit of the series.
John D. Rockefeller III, then-president of the
Japan Society (New York), and MoMA curator Arthur Drexler visited Japan in February 1953 to meet with the business leaders of Japan and to request their support for the project. The
Japan-America Society (JAS) agreed to sponsor the project, and declared that the Japanese House should be donated by Japan as a gift to American people in order to promote the cultural exchange. Sponsored by both the private sector and the government, the JAS raised a total of ¥18.5 million ($51,000 at the exchange rate of ¥360/$ in 1953) from 270 corporations and individuals. The National Forestry Agency of Japan granted special permission to harvest the wood, particularly "hinoki" cypress wood, which was in short supply. A special Rockefeller Architectural Committee was formed and recommended a 17th-century house for the exhibit since that style most typically represents Japanese traditional architecture. The Committee unanimously chose
Junzo Yoshimura to design the house. Yoshimura had worked for Czech-born American modernist architect,
Antonin Raymond for nine years in Tokyo and spent in 1940 a year in Raymond's office in
New Hope, Pennsylvania. Yoshimura was close friends with
George Nakashima, a Japanese American furniture maker in
Bucks County, Pennsylvania. The 11th generation master carpenter, Heizaemon Ito was chosen to oversee the construction. Ito's family has been master carpenter of Lord Tokugawa, the shogunate family that ruled Japan throughout the Edo period (1600-1868), since the 17th century. ==Exhibit at MoMA==