Sori Yanagi

Japanese product designer (1915-2011)
In this Japanese name, the family name is Yanagi.

Sōri Yanagi (柳 宗理, Yanagi Sōri, 1915–2011)[1] was a Japanese industrial designer.[2] is one of the most famous product designers in Japan. He played a role in Japanese modern design developed from after World War 2 to the high-growth period in the Japanese economy. He is both a representative of the wholly Japanese modern designer and a full-blown modernist who merged simplicity and practicality with elements of traditional Japanese crafts.

Early life

change

He was born in 1915 in Tokyo, Japan, as the son of Soetsu Yanagi, who founded the "mingei" movement which celebrated Japanese folk crafts and the beauty of everyday objects. Soetsu helped establish the Nihon Mingeikon, the Folk Crafts Museum of Japan. Sori entered Tokyo Art School in 1934, where he studied both art and architecture. He was influenced by Le Corbusier as well as by Charlotte Perriand when she worked in Japan in the early 1940s. So, his interests moved from painting to buildings to design and objects.

Designs

change

After World War II, he designed many products: furniture, three-wheeled vehicles, Olympic cauldrons, pedestrian overpasses, etc. One of the most famous pieces of furniture is his Butterfly Stool. Announced in 1956, its' 2-piece form has been compared to a butterfly's open wings. Alternately, the shape can be seen as the gateway of a Shinto shrine or even an antique samurai helmet. In effect, it is a form that is both modern and timeless, that has won critical acclaim and prizes, and is included in major collections such as the Museum of Modern Art New York and the Ruble Museum.

Most of Yanagi's designs are very simple and beautiful. His products illustrate his thinking: true beauty is not made, it is born naturally. When he created a new product, he made the first versions over and over by hand, seeking new forms that took shape from both new and old ideas..

Sori Yanagi died at the age of 96 in 2011 .

Honours

change
  • Honorary Royal Designer for Industry (UK), 2008[3]

[4]

References

change
  1. "AP obituary via the Philadelphia Inquirer of December 27, 2011". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  2. Rawsthorn, Alice (2018). Design as an Attitude. Zurich, Switzerland: JRP | Ringier. ISBN 978-3037645215.
  3. Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (RSA), Sori Yanagi Archived 2012-05-23 at the Wayback Machine; retrieved 2012-5-27.
  4. "Sori Yanagi". Archived from the original on 2021-07-09. Retrieved 2021-07-07.