Tokujin Yoshioka
Saga, Japan, 1967
"I create designs that inspire, touch and speak to the heart" (Tokujin Yoshioka). When Camper and Tokujin Yoshioka work together, emotionally stirring spaces emerge. Looking to his habitual source of inspiration, nature, the designer floods the premises with soft textures, bright colours and organic forms, where seeing becomes a tactile experience. Walls resembling wildflower carpets. Chairs like rose petals. A festive atmosphere where the shoes step up to play the perfect hosts.
About Tokujin Yoshioka
Acknowledged as the most influential designer with the greatest impact on the world's creative scene, Yoshioka defines himself as "the designer who learned from nature". In 1987 he worked with Shiro Kuramata, and in 1998 he began collaborating with Issey Miyake. In the year 2000 he founded Tokujin Yoshioka Design, where he currently develops experimental projects and creates memorable designs for brands like Hermès, Toyota and Moroso. His iconic Honey-Pop Chair can be found in the collections of the MoMA, the Victoria & Albert Museum, the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, the Centre Pompidou and the Vitra Design Museum.
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