Masahiro Mori (designer) explained

Masahiro Mori
Birth Date:14 November 1927
Birth Place:Saga Prefecture, Japan
Death Place:Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan
Occupation:Industrial Designer (Ceramic), Professor
Nationality:Japanese
Education:Tama Art University
Awards:1960 The 1st Good Design Award "G-type Soysauce Bottle"
1983 The 13th Mainichi Industrial Design Award
1983 The 13th International industrial design exhibition in Valencia, Spain, Grand Prix in the Ceramic Division <Shell Bowls>

was a Japanese ceramic designer born in Saga Prefecture, Japan. The well known "G-type Soy Sauce Bottle" he designed in 1958 won the 1st Good Design Award in 1960 and its production and sales have continued until today (as of December 11, 2011). He won the Good Design Award more than 110 times in his life. In describing his design philosophy, he stated, "My pleasure as a designer is to conceive of forms for daily use, and to create pieces for production in the factory, so that many people can appreciate and enjoy using them".[1] He worked to design ceramic dishes suitable for the Japanese lifestyle in post-World War II.

Biography

Works

In the 1990s


Awards and honors

Exhibitions

See also

Notes

External links

Notes and References

  1. The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo (2002). "Masahiro Mori: A Reformer of Ceramic Design"
  2. Web site: 長崎県窯業技術センター. www.pref.nagasaki.jp.
  3. http://www.common-helsinki.com/eng/hakusan-mori.html common - Japanese design & lifestyle - PRODUCTS - Hakusan ja Masahiro Mori
  4. Web site: Department of Ceramics and Glass - UIAH. www.uiah.fi.
  5. Web site: Aberystwyth Arts Centre. www.aberystwythartscentre.co.uk.
  6. Web site: MIC International Museum of Ceramic in Faenza. www.micfaenza.org.
  7. Web site: Seite nicht gefunden. 18 January 2018. www.porzellanikon.org.
  8. Web site: 森正洋の全仕事展. exhibit.morimasahiro-ds.org.
  9. http://www.pref.saga.lg.jp/web/at-contents/kanko_bunka/k_shisetsu/kyuto.html The Kyushu Ceramic Museum