1 / 30

JAPANOLOGY FOCUS ON JAPANESE CREATIVITY a cura di Orietta Pelizzari

JAPANOLOGY FOCUS ON JAPANESE CREATIVITY a cura di Orietta Pelizzari. Art and creativity. THE JALAPAGOS SINDROME. Jalapagos. JALAPAGOS SINDROME. Japan’s Galapagos Syndrome, is used to describe how Japan still seems to be disconnected from the world in several spheres.

iden
Download Presentation

JAPANOLOGY FOCUS ON JAPANESE CREATIVITY a cura di Orietta Pelizzari

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. JAPANOLOGYFOCUS ON JAPANESE CREATIVITYa cura diOrietta Pelizzari

  2. Art and creativity THE JALAPAGOS SINDROME Jalapagos

  3. JALAPAGOS SINDROME Japan’s Galapagos Syndrome, is used to describe how Japan still seems to be disconnected from the world in several spheres. Is the new galapagosized culture of Japan just waiting to be discovered again and adopted by the outside world as a paradigm of the exquisite, the charming and the useful?

  4. Design Coop: the new market design exibition by creator’s cooperative. http://www.design-coop.jp

  5. Ba to Ma Wall • http://www.artdiv-hpf.com/batoma/en/

  6. Design Tide Tokyo http://www.designtide.jp

  7. Jumble. The exibition of art and design http://www.jumble-tokyo.com

  8. Aoyamadori St and Omotesando St.= AOSANDO http://www.aosando.com

  9. The Place The Center of Now …social community…retail…culture…people…entertainment….

  10. Pass de baton

  11. East and west, north and south. Each region has its own cultural climate. • The modern marketplace contains a vast diversity of commercial products.Creating something new is a wonderful thing, but taking good care of an object that is already there can be magical. • Pass on your Personal Culture.


  12. Hermès and Pas de Baton • “j’aime mon carreè”Items to treasure over generations

  13. Zozotown: Up-And-Coming in the Japanese Online Fashion Scene • ." Zozotown's virtual shopping boulevard. • Zozotown

  14. Rag Tag vintage multistore • http://www.ragtag.jp/pc/pdetail/1110/24027/

  15. Lift – Daykanyama, Tokyo • http://www.lift-net.co.jp/index.html • Concept boutique • Our most is: pursue originality and challenge perceptions. • Gustavo Lins • -Mihatayasuhiro • -Cornelian Taurus • -The Viridi+Anne

  16. designers …on the stage!

  17. shoes: AKAMINE (AKA INTERNATIONAL / ZAPATA) • http://www.aka.co.jp/

  18. SHOES: TETSUYA UENOBE • http://sites.google.com/site/uenobe/uenobeartline

  19. shoes: MOE ENOMOTO • http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/fl20080624jk.html

  20. JAPANESE DESIGNERS: JOHN LAWRENCE SULLIVAN • John Lawrence Sullivan is a Japanese man clothing brand designed by Arashi Yanagawa. • Unlike many designers from Japan, he started his career as a professional boxer. His inspiration for John Lawrence Sullivan came from the boxerof the same name who, in the 1880s became the first true champion in heavyweight boxing. • He is intrigued by the challenge of matching patterns and materials, leading to aesthetic pieces of art. He continues to pursue the elegant image of sleek silhouette and fine tailoring.

  21. JAPANESE DESIGNERS: JULIUS • Julius is a Japanese man fashion label run and designed by Tatsuro Horikawa. • The label focuses on presenting a wide array of gothic inspired clothing, utilizing the color black extensively to explore its meaning in both Avant Garde, spiritual, and religious aspects of the designer’s life. • It's not only a clothing brand but a global concept and a complete creative aesthetic world which also encompasses global Art Direction and graphic design. • The goal of a designer, according to Horikawa, is to contribute to the lifestyleof the individual rather than just the wardrobe.

  22. JAPANESE DESIGNERS: YOSHIO KUBO “There are so many outfits in the world, and people keep buying and wearing outfits for daily life. The large number of clothes has paralyzed people’s thinking of wearing and dressing. Therefore, I like to design clothing that makes people think meaning of details and wearing.” yoshio kubo/muller of yoshiokubo http://www.ykgf.jp/ undecorated MAN http://www.undm.jp/

  23. JAPANESE DESIGNERS: SOMARTA • Somarta is a clothing brand started Tamae Hirokawa. Hirokawa, who originally worked with Issey Miyake in the Miyake Design Studio in the 1990s debuted with Somarta over the course of two years in 2006. The brand focuses on the use of lace, knit, and macramé among many other design methods that have been quite popular with the Japanese fashion magazines and press. • The essence of Somarta is the use of full piece bodysuits as well as similarly styled clothing that introduces multiple different forms of design into similar products. Items from the Second Skin Series include the full piece body suits, a line of underwear, and a much more wearable line of clothing including things like pleated pants, capes, and trench coats for outer wear.

  24. JAPANESE DESIGNERS: AGURI SAGIMORI • Aguri Sagimori work, represented in her self-named label, is a combination of high concept designs andedgy cuts that allows her to take on the modern development of fashion with classic styles. • She presents a uniquely Japanese aesthetic through her concepts of feminine beauty and enchantment, frailty and strength. Through her designs, this 24 year old continues to redefine the nature of tailored clothing.

  25. JAPANESE DESIGNERS: DRESS CAMP • DressCamp is a japanese fashion label and clothing line created by Toshikazu Iwaya, and now led by Marjan Pejoski. • The line represents a combination of modern designs and stereotypes and classic, 1970s and 1980s themes. • The essence of DressCamp’s clothing is to create themes and designs that harken to numerous specific time periods and eras in fashion design. Using patterns and styles from the era, DressCamp presented excessive, flaring clothing, hot pants, big hair, scarves, and halter tops.

  26. JAPANESE DESIGNERS IN PARIS: • TSUMORI CHISATO www.tsumorichisato.com • ATSURO TAYAMA www.atsurotayama.jp • JUNYA WATANABE

  27. JAPANESE DESIGNERS IN PARIS: • TAO KURIHARA www.atsurotayama.jp • JUNKO SHIMADA www.junkoshimada.com • SACAI ABE CHITOSE

  28. JAPANESE DESIGNERS IN PARIS: • THE DRESS & CO HIDEAKI SAKAGUCHI www.thedress.jp • TOSSY MIURA www.universal-lab.com/tossymiura • NAOSHI SAWAYANAGI http://naoshisawayanagi.web.fc2.com/

  29. Giapponesi si nasce

More Related