
Profile
Born in Saga, Japan in 1967. Worked under Shiro Kuramata in 1987 and
Issey Miyake since 1988 and established his own studio, Tokujin Yoshioka Design
in 2000.
He has done many projects with Issey Miyake for nearly 20 years such as shop design and installation for A-POC and ISSEY MIYAKE. Also, he has collaborated with various companies in and outside Japan such as HERMES, TOYOTA, BMW, KDDI, SWAROVSKI, and other noted ones.
Since the paper chair "Honey-pop" (2001) has attracted a
great deal of public attention, Tokujin produced Driadeユs "Tokyo-pop", Yamagiwa's lighting "ToFU", cell phone "MEDIA SKIN" for au design project,
chandelier "STARDUST" for SWAROVSKI Crystal
Palace, polyester chair "PANE Chair", "Chair
That Disappears in the Rain" made of special glass, installations for LEXUS, MOROSO and many
others. They have been highly evaluated as art works simply more than design
works.
Some of his most important works are
displayed as a part of permanent collections in the world's well-known museums such
as Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York, Centre National d'Art et de Culture Georges
Pompidou, Victoria and Albert Museum, Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum and
Vitra Design Museum.
Awards
Mainichi Design Award, 2001
Cultural Affairs Section of Government of
Japan, Encourage Prize, 2006
BVLGARI Brilliant Dreams Award, 2007
Good Design Award, 2007
Design Miami, Designer of the Year, 2007
Wallpaper Design Awards, 2008
Design for Asia Award (DFA Award), 2008
Elle Deco International Design Awards (EDIDA), Designer of the Year, 2009
TOKYO Design & Art ENVIROMENTAL AWARDS, Artist of the Year, 2010
A&W Architektur & Wohnen, Designer of the Year, 2011
Selected as one of "100 Japanese respected by
the world" in
Newsweek magazine (Japanese edition)