
Kita Toshiyuki: Designs for a Better Japan
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Better Designs for Better Living
INTERVIEWER What are the prospects for rebuilding a better way of living in Japan?
KITA I’m confident that the future is bright for Japan. The economy has slumped so badly that if there is no sign of recovery soon, a change of lifestyles will be the only way to bring about economic growth. There will simply be no alternative. If people’s lifestyles improve, there will be an increase in domestic demand. And that will lead to economic recovery. The housing situation can’t get any worse. Because the industry has been so neglected for so long, there’s plenty of room for growth.
A good first step would be to try to use renovations as a way to increase the cramped size of Japanese housing. Invest some of your savings in renovating your home, and a dream lifestyle could be waiting for you . . . Countries like Germany and Italy tried this with some success about forty years ago. In Korea, too, there’s a movement to establish minimum housing standards to guarantee larger living spaces.
Kita relaxes on the Saruyama chair, one of his trademark pieces. He says he got the idea for the relaxing, freeform chair (whose name means “monkey mountain”) while watching monkeys on Mt. Takasaki in Ōita Prefecture. The prototype was produced more than 40 years ago, and the product has been a favorite around the world since 1990.
I am confident that if we used renovation to increase living spaces in Japan in a similar way, the situation would improve quite rapidly. If people are not living a richer, more affluent lifestyle in Japan today, it is not because we can’t do it. It’s more a question of desire than anything else.
Japan already has a rich foundation for design and plenty of skilled workers, so once lifestyles start to change, we would probably see dramatic improvements. It’s quite simple—people have to make a conscious decision to enjoy their lives more. After all, you only live once. If we can achieve that, everything else will follow.
INTERVIEWER The idea of living life to the full is deeply imbedded in the local culture of your hometown of Osaka, isn’t it?
KITA That’s right. Historically, Osaka culture has had something slightly Latin about it. It’s also a culture where people have not been afraid to speak their minds. In that sense, it’s possible that the movement to reassess the way we live our lives might start there. There are big political changes underway in the city at the moment too. I’m hopeful that there is the potential for change.
Craftsmanship with Heart and Soul
INTERVIEWER When did you first become interested in design?
KITA At quite a young age. I suppose I would have been in junior high school. At the time, “design” was a new term in Japan. I was intrigued to know what it meant. It had this image as a new profession that had sprung into existence since the war. To my childish way of thinking, it seemed to offer a front-row view of the latest developments. I think that was the appeal at first—I wanted to be one of the first to see what was happening.
In some ways, a designer’s job is similar to that of a chef. You have to put your basic ingredients together in a way that will please as many people as possible. You need care and consideration. In design just as in cuisine, you have to make use of limited ingredients to produce an item that the user will enjoy using. Otherwise it has no value.
INTERVIEWER What kind of perspective do you think is necessary when trying to communicate an image of “Japan” to people in other countries?
KITA The first thing to remember is that Japan is blessed with rich and abundant natural beauty. You can enjoy the beauty of the four seasons anywhere you go in Japan. History and cultural heritage are also extremely valuable resources. In particular, I think there is something typically Japanese about the pride people take in craftsmanship—not in the object itself, so much as the state of mind during the process and the determination to create something really special.
This is true not only of the traditional crafts. It applies to modern high-tech products as well. This dedication—the sense that engineers and designers are really putting their heart and soul into the product—is something that applies to all made-in-Japan products. We must make sure that we pass this on to the future.
It may be this sense of heart and soul and the drive for perfection that makes Japanese design different from design in other countries. The Japanese economy is in the doldrums at the moment, but so long as this spirit and motivation survives, I think it’s only a matter of time before things burst into bloom again.
Today, young designers across Asia—in particular, embryonic young designers in places like China, Taiwan, and Korea—are using the Internet to keep up with designs from all around the world. In that sense, national borders are disappearing from the world of design. This is precisely why it is important for Japan to maintain its own sense of originality. This idea of heart and soul should be one of the defining keynotes of the Japanese approach to design.
(Translated from a December 14, 2011, interview in Japanese. Interviewer Harano Jōji is representative director of the Japan Echo Foundation. Photographs by Ōtaki Kaku, with thanks to the Japan Institute of Design Promotion.)
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craftsmanship design Sharp Kita Toshiyuki product design traditional crafts Aquos Cassina Wink chair Wajima lacquer washi renovation ecological culture