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The Snow by Tokujin Yoshioka

Feathers fly around this 15 metre-long tank installed by Japanese designer Tokujin Yoshioka at the Mori Art Museum in Tokyo.

The Snow by Tokujin Yoshioka

Called The Snow, the installation is part of an exhibition called Sensing Nature that continues until 7 November.

The Snow by Tokujin Yoshioka

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Here's some more information from Yoshioka:


In recent years, I have been studying the essence that human beings would sense. It is neither arranging nor minimising the forms, but integrating the phenomena and the low of the nature into the design, and see how it would affect and inspire ourselves.

The Snow by Tokujin Yoshioka

Because I believe there is a hint for the future somewhere in-between the essence of the design and the nature, I would like to pursue designing works with this aspect.

Sensing Nature by Tokujin Yoshioka

The Snow is a 15-meter-wide dynamic installation. Seeing the hundreds kilograms of light feather blown all over and falling down slowly, the memory of the snowscape would lie within people's heart would be bubbled up.

Sensing Nature by Tokujin Yoshioka

This work would show unimaginable beauty by capturing the irregular movement of the nature. This is designed after the installation in 1997 that expressed the "snow" by the concept of the color "white".

Sensing Nature by Tokujin Yoshioka

The material is feather, which I believe is the lightest material of the present day.

Sensing Nature by Tokujin Yoshioka

The snowscape created with the feather would be more like the memory of snow lying with people rather than the actual snow.

Sensing Nature by Tokujin Yoshioka

The theme of the exhibition is to rethink the Japanese perception of nature, which is to question how the unconscious power to sense the nature and the value of nature in Japan would affect the contemporary art and design.

Sensing Nature by Tokujin Yoshioka

I do not really know about the value of nature in Japan, but what I would like todo is not to reproduce the nature but to know how human senses function when experiencing nature.

Sensing Nature by Tokujin Yoshioka

The most beautiful things I believe in this world is what is irreproducible, accidentally born, and disorder that cannot be understood by the theory. I believe the nature is the ultimate beauty in this world.

Sensing Nature by Tokujin Yoshioka

The sunlight, soft breeze, and the harmony that leaves create, the variety of the essence in the nature touches our emotions. I intend not to reproduce them, but to pick the element that inspires our heart and integrate it into the design.

Sensing Nature by Tokujin Yoshioka

Sensing Nature
Place: Mori Art Museum
Date: 2010. July 24.~ November 7.
Tokujin Yoshioka Design