Humanist first, architect second: I.M. Pei retrospective is a dose of optimism
If titled “Architecture Is Life,” the exhibition would merely narrate from Pei’s point of view what architecture meant to him. But the exhibition refers to “Life Is Architecture” in which life is prioritised and Pei’s works democratised. In this light, architecture was a medium, a means or a metaphor through which we can explore deeper life meanings through Pei’s lens.

He started his practice in 1955, well before the information age, theoretical discourse, parametric modelling software or AI-generated design – if we can call that design. He left behind a body of work that we should study to appreciate the meaning of architecture, space, light and materials – truly relevant works go beyond conveniently generated eye candy that grabs attention but lacks deeper convictions.
In the West, Pei did not just blend in but he also bridged the East and the West; Americans celebrate his life as a great immigrant story. He was able to extract the essence of the project sites and historical significance, absorb knowledge, reinterpret spatial arrangements from the Chinese garden to Islamic symbols in modern means, and find his formal logic in the resolution. Pei’s works are transcultural. He is the pride of both China and America.
In a time when the world is culturally, socially and ideologically divided, and when superficiality, irrationalism and increased tensions between individuals, interest groups, and nations are overwhelming, we need the idea of I.M. Pei more than ever, if only to find optimism in humanity.
The M+ exhibition is a must-see, not only for artists and architects who look for inspiration, also for people who believe in old-school meritocracy, Generation Y and Z who are confused about their future and searching for a role model, or anybody who believes we are one people, albeit with different backgrounds, and that we should celebrate our diversity. As his son Sandi Pei Li-Chung said, more than an architect, he was a humanist.
Anybody practising architecture knows that pure ingenuity and good ideas do not guarantee success. It takes a lot of luck, hard work, resilience, compromises and charm, not just to win over clients and other competitors, but to win them over through nobility in the work and the character.
The exhibition ends with a video of Pei sharing his conviction that an architect should carry a sense of responsibility; in his words, if the work is good, it should enrich the environment and bring excitement. Pei delivered all of the above with his signature smile. That’s why he is one of a kind.
Dennis Lee is a Hong Kong-born, America-licensed architect with years of design experience in the US and China