Issey Miyake

2022 - 8 - 9

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Image courtesy of "Nikkei Asia"

Japanese fashion designer Issey Miyake dies at 84 (Nikkei Asia)

TOKYO -- Issey Miyake, a world-renowned Japanese fashion designer and recipient of the country's Order of Culture, died of liver cancer on Friday at t.

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Image courtesy of "Aljazeera.com"

Japanese fashion designer Issey Miyake dies from cancer at 84 (Aljazeera.com)

Miyake pioneered high-tech, comfortable clothing and was among wave of Japanese designers who made their mark in Paris.

Tested for their freedom of movement on dancers, this led to the development of his signature “Pleats Please” line. I gravitated towards the field of clothing design, partly because it is a creative format that is modern and optimistic.” Born in Hiroshima, Miyake was seven years old when the United States dropped an atomic bomb on the city while he was in a classroom.

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Image courtesy of "Interaksyon"

Issey Miyake, Japan's prince of pleats, dies of cancer aged 84 —media (Interaksyon)

TOKYO (Updated 10:44 p.m.)— Japanese designer Issey Miyake, famed for his pleated style of clothing that never wrinkles and who produced the signature.

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Image courtesy of "WJCT NEWS"

Famed Japanese designer Issey Miyake dies at 84 (WJCT NEWS)

Miyake defined an era in Japan's modern history, reaching stardom in the 1970s with his origami-like pleats that transformed usually crass polyester into ...

Born in Hiroshima in 1938, Miyake was a star as soon as he hit the European runways. Miyake kept his family life private, and survivors are not known. His down-to-earth clothing was meant to celebrate the human body regardless of race, build, size or age.

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Image courtesy of "The Verge"

Issey Miyake, fashion pioneer and designer of Steve Jobs ... (The Verge)

Issey Miyake, a cutting-edge fashion designer, died at age 84 in Tokyo. Miyake is known for his innovative pleating technology and for creating the black ...

Straight legs of trousers and flat lines on jackets fill with buoyancy and movement — the clothes, above all, are meant to reflect life. Miyake and his team had developed an innovative method of treating fabric in the ‘80s that created permanent rows of micro pleats that withstand folding, washing machines, and being jammed into suitcases (trust me). The two-dimensional flatness of the garments is in line with how Miyake conceived of clothing, art, and technology. But he kept his own consistent outfit, with Miyake supplying hundreds of identical shirts. “Clothing is the closest thing to all humans.” Candy-colored clothes hung like streaks of paint against the perfectly white laminated walls.

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Image courtesy of "Art Newspaper"

Issey Miyake, ground-breaking Japanese fashion designer and ... (Art Newspaper)

After surviving the atomic bombing of Hiroshima as a child, Miyake turned to clothes as a modern, optimistic form of creativity, and revived the use of ...

And the first 15 years of his atelier's production is captured in a lavishly cool monograph, Issey Miyake & Miyake Design Studio 1970-1985 (Works Words Years) (1985). A landmark retrospective of his workwas held at the National Art Center in Tokyo in 2016, covering 45 years of his design work. As well as the Met, his clothes are held by insitutions including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Victoria & Albert Museum, London, and the Denver Art Museum, where pieces by Miyake and Yamamoto are hung alongside Japanese traditional garments. Miyake handed over the running of his business, which had expanded into fragrances—including L'eau d'Issey—and other merchandise, to others in 1997, to focus on research into new fabrics and production techniques, fuelled by his interest in the connection between technology and creativity. In 2009, Miyake, who had long been reluctant to be labelled "the designer who survived the atomic bomb", wrote a powerful op-ed articleon his experience for the New York Times, in which he encouraged then-US president Barack Obama to visit the city to demonstrate his commitment to eliminating nuclear weapons. Miyake made another kind of headline when he supplied what became a trademark polyester-cotton turtleneck to the co-founder of Apple, Steve Jobs, a piece of clothing that became as much of a brand marker for the biggest tech company in the world as the bitten-apple logo and the curve of a corner on the iPhone. On a trip to Japan in the 1980s, Jobs had admired the practical chic of the grey uniforms worn by Sony workers, and that company's chief, Akio Morita, told him that Miyake had designed them. But Miyake, who did not care for the cost and impracticality of haute couture, brought this side of his work to the high street in 1993 with his Pleats Please clothes—now collectors' items—where heat-treated polyester was used to create genuinely unisex, permanently pleated, free-flowing, one-size-fits-all garments.

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Image courtesy of "The Conversation AU"

Part of the Japanese revolution in fashion, Issey Miyake changed ... (The Conversation AU)

Issey Miyake's clothing is both theatrical and practical. The Japanese designer has died aged 84.

The jackets are unlined and embrace the body in unexpected ways. Once unrolled and put on the body, they spring back to life. The textiles have an unexpected tactility next to the skin. Miyake, on the other hand, tested the zeitgeist by suggesting we use clothes to make our bodies and appearances suit our needs. Clothes were knitted in three dimensions in a continuous tube using computerised knitting technology as a whole and from a single thread. All questioned Eurocentric views of fashion and beauty.

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