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Japanese Design Since 1945: A Complete Sourcebook [Minkštas viršelis]

4.62/5 (48 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 448 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 232x282x1.50 mm, weight: 2431 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 03-Nov-2020
  • Leidėjas: Harry N. Abrams, Inc.
  • ISBN-10: 1419750542
  • ISBN-13: 9781419750540
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 448 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 232x282x1.50 mm, weight: 2431 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 03-Nov-2020
  • Leidėjas: Harry N. Abrams, Inc.
  • ISBN-10: 1419750542
  • ISBN-13: 9781419750540
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
“Pollock knows the country’s design history well and the key role that design has in Japanese society. . . . In nearly 500 fully illustrated pages, she profiles 70 architects and designers.” —Architectural Record

Here is a groundbreaking, comprehensive overview of Japanese design during the last eight decades that will appeal to artists, craftspeople, designers, and historians.

For the Japanese, the concept of design is not limited to functionality and materiality—it is deeply connected with culture and tradition. In this sense, everyday objects become more than their function: They are to be reflected upon, to be touched and cherished.

As mass production became widespread in the postwar period, fascinating cross-cultural exchanges began to take place between Japan and the West. And in recent years, a new generation of designers has taken Japanese creativity into entirely new territory, reconceptualizing the very meaning of design.

Author Naomi Pollock writes, “It doesn’t really matter what the medium is, whether plastic or metal, manufacturers treat the material with the same kind of reverence . . . the attention to detail and, above all, respect for the hand of the artisan, whether a traditional craftsperson or a factory worker. Even the mass-produced or computer-generated can be created with the pride and care of the handmade.”

Huge in scope and scale, featuring tables and chairs, cameras, and telephones, fashion, buildings, vehicles, and more, featuring hundreds of objects and contributions from both Japanese and Western designers inspired by Japan, this volume stands as the definitive work on the subject.

Some names will be familiar (Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa of SANAA, Issey Miyake, Shigeru Ban) as will be some of the designs (the Sony Walkman, Panasonic’s Panapet R-70 radio, the Aibo robot dog, Yamaha motorcycles, and Shiro Kuramata’s rose-filled Miss Blanche acrylic chair). But there is so much here that even knowledgeable designers will find something new and the different.

This is a unique resource—beautiful, educational, and entertaining—that will appeal to anyone with an interest in Japanese culture, a passion for international design, or just a taste for beautiful products of all kinds.

“Pollock knows the country’s design history well and the key role that design has in Japanese society. . . . In nearly 500 fully illustrated pages, she profiles 70 architects and designers.” —Architectural Record
 
Here is a groundbreaking, comprehensive overview of Japanese design during the last eight decades that will appeal to artists, craftspeople, designers, and historians.
 
For the Japanese, the concept of design is not limited to functionality and materiality—it is deeply connected with culture and tradition. In this sense, everyday objects become more than their function: They are to be reflected upon, to be touched and cherished.
 
As mass production became widespread in the postwar period, fascinating cross-cultural exchanges began to take place between Japan and the West. And in recent years, a new generation of designers has taken Japanese creativity into entirely new territory, reconceptualizing the very meaning of design.
 
Author Naomi Pollock writes, “It doesn’t really matter what the medium is, whether plastic or metal, manufacturers treat the material with the same kind of reverence . . . the attention to detail and, above all, respect for the hand of the artisan, whether a traditional craftsperson or a factory worker. Even the mass-produced or computer-generated can be created with the pride and care of the handmade.”
 
Huge in scope and scale, featuring tables and chairs, cameras, and telephones, fashion, buildings, vehicles, and more, featuring hundreds of objects and contributions from both Japanese and Western designers inspired by Japan, this volume stands as the definitive work on the subject.
 
Some names will be familiar (Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa of SANAA, Issey Miyake, Shigeru Ban) as will be some of the designs (the Sony Walkman, Panasonic’s Panapet R-70 radio, the Aibo robot dog, Yamaha motorcycles, and Shiro Kuramata’s rose-filled Miss Blanche acrylic chair). But there is so much here that even knowledgeable designers will find something new and the different.
 
This is a unique resource—beautiful, educational, and entertaining—that will appeal to anyone with an interest in Japanese culture, a passion for international design, or just a taste for beautiful products of all kinds.
Foreword 6(2)
Masaaki Kanai
Introduction 8(8)
The Craft of Japanese Design
The Design Titans
16(109)
Junichi Arai
17(7)
Naoto Fukasawa
24(8)
Kenya Hara
32(8)
Yusaku Kamekura
40(8)
Isamu Kenmochi
48(8)
Toshiyuki Kita
56(8)
Shiro Kuramata
64(8)
Issey Miyake
72(8)
MUJI
80(8)
Taku Satoh
88(8)
Ikko Tanaka
96(8)
Sori Yanagi
104(8)
Tokujin Yoshioka
112(9)
Essay From Awakening to Modernism: Design in Japan Before 1945
121(4)
Hitoshi Mori
The Designers & Everyday Icons
125(48)
Tables & Chairs
126(1)
Keiji Ashizawa
127(3)
DRILL DESIGN
130(4)
Hisae Igarashi
134(4)
Motomi Kawakami
138(4)
Everyday Icons The Butterfly Stool
142(1)
Mikiya Kobayashi
143(3)
Takeshi Nii
146(4)
Oki Sato nendo
150(5)
Everyday Icons The Teiza Chair
155(1)
Katsuhei Toyoguchi
156(4)
Shigeru Uchida
160(4)
Everyday Icons The WINK Chair
164(1)
Riki Watanabe
165(4)
Essay Japanese Space and Chair Design
169(4)
Naomi Pollock
Food & Drink
173(48)
Shin Azumi
174(4)
Kimura Glass
178(4)
Everyday Icons The Polka-Dotted Teapot
182(1)
Makoto Komatsu
183(4)
Everyday Icons GLOBAL Knives
187(1)
Masahiro Mori
188(6)
Shinichiro Ogata Simplicity
194(4)
Masanori Oji
198(4)
Masatoshi Sakaegi
202(4)
Moritaka Yoshita
206(4)
Everyday Icons The HS Stackable Tumbler
210(1)
Mosuke Yoshitake Hisanori Masuda
211(6)
Essay Scandinavian Designand the Rebirth of Japanese Design
217(4)
Makoto Shimazaki
On & Off
221(48)
Yoshio Akioka KAK
222(4)
GK Design Group
226(4)
Everyday Icons Akari Light Sculpture
230(1)
Ichiro Iwasaki Iwasaki Design Studio
231(5)
Shosaku Kondo
236(3)
Everyday Icons The Midget Car
239(1)
Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Panasonic Corporation
240(4)
Everyday Icons The Shinkansen "Bullet Train"
244(1)
Fumie Shibata Design Studio S
245(3)
Sony
248(6)
Everyday Icons Aibo
254(1)
Gen Terao Balmuda
255(5)
Yamaha Corporation
260(5)
Essay Japanese Car Design Since 1945
265(4)
Shinji Hamada
Promotion & Packaging
269(51)
Misa Awatsuji & Maki Awatsuji AWATSUJI design
270(3)
Everyday Icons The Mitsukoshi Shopping Bag
273(1)
Shigeo Fukuda
274(6)
Takenobu Igarashi
280(4)
Everyday Icons The Kikkoman Soy Sauce Bottle
284(1)
Kenji Itoh
285(4)
Everyday Icons Tokyo Metro Manner Posters
289(1)
Shin Matsunaga
290(6)
Kazumasa Nagai
296(4)
Masayoshi Nakajo
300(4)
Hiroshi Ohchi
304(4)
Kashiwa Sato
308(4)
Everyday Icons The Onigiri Wrapper
312(1)
Asao Tokolo
313(3)
Tadanori Yokoo
316(4)
Warp & Weft
320(45)
Hiroshi Awatsuji
321(4)
Everyday Icons Tenugui
325(1)
Akira Minagawa mina perhonen
326(4)
Makiko Minagawa
330(4)
Osamu Mita
334(4)
Everyday Icons PLEATS PLEASE ISSEY MIYAKE
338(1)
Eiji Miyamoto
339(3)
Reiko Sudo
342(5)
Everyday Icons HEATTECH
347(1)
Masaru Suzuki
348(4)
Katsuhiji Wakisaka
352(4)
Everyday Icons Imabari Towel
356(1)
Samiro Yunoki
357(4)
Essay 13 Meters of Cloth
361(4)
Matilda McQuaid
Lifestyle & Leisure
365(45)
Tomoko Azumi
366(3)
Everyday Icons Airvase
369(1)
Shigeki Fujishiro
370(4)
Noriko Hashida
374(4)
Koji lyama
378(3)
Everyday Icons The Plastic Umbrella
381(1)
Kazuo Kawasaki
382(4)
Ryoichi Kobayashi Studio GALA
386(4)
Makoto Koizumi
390(5)
Everyday Icons Washlet
395(1)
Masayuki Kurokawa
396(6)
Nobuho Miya Kamasada
402(4)
Chiaki Murata Metaphys
406(4)
A-Z of Designers 410(20)
Notes 430(2)
Further Reading 432(2)
About the Authors 434(2)
Acknowledgments 436(1)
Picture Credits 437(3)
Index 440
Naomi Pollock is an American architect who lives in Tokyo, where she writes about Japanese design. Her work has appeared in numerous publications, including Dwell, Wallpaper*, and Architectural Record, for whom she is the special international correspondent.