Kōhei Sugiura
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is a Japanese graphic designer and researcher in Asian iconography. Throughout his career, Sugiura has been a pioneer within the design world using processes that enables the visualization of consciousness in his large body of work that ranges from record jackets and posters, to books, magazines, and exhibition catalogues, to diagrams, stamps, and more.  He is also active in promoting the study of traditional Asian cultures through producing innovative catalogue designs and organizing exhibitions such as ''Mandala: now you see it, now you don't'' (1980) and ''Flower Cosmology: Traditions in Dyeing, Weaving, and Ornaments'' (1992), underscored by his prolific research on cosmologies and mandalas.    Sugiura served as a visiting professor for the
Ulm School of Design The Ulm School of Design (german: Hochschule für Gestaltung Ulm) was a college of design based in Ulm, Germany. It was founded in 1953 by Inge Aicher-Scholl, Otl Aicher and Max Bill, the latter being first rector of the school and a former stud ...
in Germany (1964-1967); professor at
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(1987-2002); and is currently the director of the Asian Design Institute at Kobe Design University (from April 2010). He has received numerous awards including the Mainichi Industrial Award (1962), Mainichi Art Award (1997); Purple Ribbon (1997); Leipzig Book Design Competition Special Honor Award; Design Special Achievement Award by the Hong Kong Design Award Asia (2014); Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays (2019).


Education and career

Sugiura studied architecture at the Tokyo National University of the Arts. He developed an interest in design as a university student and after graduating in 1955, he worked under the designer Ryuichi Yamashiro at
Takashimaya is a Japanese multinational corporation operating a department store chain carrying a wide array of products, ranging from wedding dresses and other apparel to electronics and flatware. It has more than 12 branches strategically located in 2 ...
Department Store's advertising department for six months. The following year, Sugiura received the prestigious Nisshenbi (日宣美, JAAC) Award for his jacket design for of the record ''LP JACKET'' and began to garner attention in the graphic design world as a rising talent with an atypical architecture background. From a young age, Sugiura loved music and was knowledgeable in folk music and contemporary music. Early in his career, Sugiura took on various music related design jobs, such as the newly founded Sogetsu Art Center. For Sogetsu, he worked with other notable designers
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, Kiyoshi Awazu, and
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to create materials promoting music related events for contemporary artists and musicians including
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and
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. Sugiura began his career in the late 1950s when advertising dominated the majority of design work, as was suggested by the term “commercial design” (商業デザイン) having come into conventional use. In response, Sugiura, along with a bourgeoning generation of artists in their late 20s, sought to devise a mode of visual design that took inspiration from a wide frame of references, including science, philosophy, and religion, as well as other artistic mediums. Suigura took on a leadership role for this group of young designers, bringing Japan’s existing design climate into a modern era. Some of his best examples include his numerous book designs as well as his inventive diagrams (also known as infographics), such as his series of ''Time Distance'' ''Map''s. His work on "maps" served as an important step in establishing diagrams and infographics as part of visual communication and design in Japan.


Magazines

Over the course of his career, Sugiura has worked as a designer on nearly 40 different magazines, ranging from academic periodicals to novel cultural publications and some with run times as long as two or three decades.


Early magazines (1960s)

When Sugiura moved to freelance work in the late 1950s, most magazines and particularly academic magazines, were designed by editors who often had little design experience. Sugiura was among the first to introduce an artistic yet methodical approach to the field of academic magazine design. His designs from this period are characterized by his process of first determining an origin pattern and reworking the pattern in various orientations and color arrangements. He described this method as jikozōshoku dezain (自己増殖デザイン; self-proliferation design). As these types of magazines often had a limited design budget, Sugiura's method saved costs by repurposing printing plates which would typically be discarded or retired after the original design had been printed. Sugiura attributes the realization of self-proliferation design to his work on one of his earliest magazines, ''Ongaku geijutsu'' (音楽芸術, "art of music") (1960-1963), the only Japanese magazine at the time that was dedicated to academic research on contemporary music.Sugiura, ''疾風迅雷―杉浦康平雑誌デザインの半世紀'', 12. For the cover, he created an original pattern based on the sequence of
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's mode de valuers et d’intensités and micro sequences from the twelve-tone technique of musical composition. Over the next two years, subsequent covers were derivatives of the same pattern, composed through slight deviations in the sequences combined with variations in the colors and number of colors. Magazines ''Kōhoku'' (広告, "advertising") (1960); ''Kōgei nyūsu'' (工芸ニュース, "industrial art news"), ''Sūgaku seminā'' (数学セミナー, "mathematics semina")(第1期)1962-1970, and ''Shin Nhon bungaku'' (新日本文学, "new Japanese literature") (1964-1966) also featured covers conceived through the mechanics of self-proliferation design. Using the self-proliferation method, Sugiura also realized a series of “vibrating” designs that he would incorporate into music-based projects, including the record jacket of ''Experimental Music of Japan '69'' (日本の電子音楽 '69 "electronic music of Japan '69") and ''Masakazu Nakai zenshū'' (中井正一全集 ) (1981). These designs also originated from his cover work for ''Ongaku geijutsu,'' in 1963, when Sugiura replaced the original pattern with one that was formed primarily through concentric circles. Through the overlaying, crossing, and cropping of concentric circles and other geometric shapes, Sugiura felt he had developed a design that could capture a sense of movement or rhythm and act as a visual embodiment of acoustics and noise.


Shift from pattern to content (Late 1960s onwards)

After teaching at the Ulm School of Design, Sugiura's design philosophy underwent a significant shift, inspired by the consciousness of civil society within German design practices and the role of design as method of visual communication. For his magazine covers, Sugiura moved away from purely decorative patterns and towards a more content focused approach wherein he would form a unique “face” and visual identity for the magazine. In the case of architectural magazines such as ''SD'' (1966-1968) and ''the Toshi-Jutaku'' (都会住宅, "the monthly journal of urban housing") (1968-1970), Sugiura opted for covers that were unprecedentedly text heavy in an attempt to appeal to the reader-base of architects (whom he felt were more concerned with verbal and textual expression/communication versus visual). While most architecture magazine covers at the time featured a single enlarged photograph, Sugiura opted for dense and compositionally complex covers because he felt the simplicity of a single image could not properly convey the multiplicity of thoughts present in postmodern urban society. Sugiura also began experimenting with novel designs that featured uncommon text orientations and printing materials. For the philosophy magazine ''Paideia (''パイデイア) (1969-1972), he formulated his own design grid that is based on 8 point type, making it one of the first twentieth-century Japanese magazines to forgo the Japanese metric system or
shakkanhō Traditional Japanese units of measurement or the shakkanhō (, "''shaku–kan'' system") is the traditional system of measurement used by the people of the Japanese archipelago. It is largely based on the Chinese system, which spread to Japan and ...
.Sugiura, 疾風迅雷―杉浦康平雑誌デザインの半世紀, 50-51. Sugiura also chose unconventional paper colors, such as green and light purple, and ink colors for the text. For the magazine ''Asian Culture'' (1972-1987), later renamed to ''APC'' (Asian Pacific Culture) (1988-1995), he refrained from using any white or black paper, and instead chose to print onto bright craft paper with vividly colored inks to create an electric duo-chrome style that would convey the vitality he saw in Asian culture. Sugiura's longest running involvement with a single publication, ''Ginka'' (季刊銀花, "quarterly silver flower") (1970-2010) underwent a new design schemata every year based on a unique theme. With ''Ginka'', Sugiura played with a dynamic and constantly changing arrangement of text and images, numerous type faces, and hand drawn calligraphy. One of the most well known themes from ''Ginka'' was in the year 1983 for which all the layouts were angled in line with the tilt of the earth's axis.  Sugiura's dedication to explorative design is also evidenced in the experimental and cross-disciplinary publications ''Uwasa no Shinsō'' (噂の眞相, "truth of rumor") (1980-2004) and ''Yu'' (遊, "play") (1971-1979). ''Uwasa no Shinsō'', a unique magazine that investigated various contemporary and historical rumors, underwent a design change every three issues. Sugiura selected new artists every year and assigned them a theme, similar to ''Ginka'' — however the constant stylistic evolution of ''Uwasa no Shinsō'' was an intentional choice to emulate the temporality and elusiveness of rumors. On the covers, images and text were often overlapped and partially covering one another, thereby creating a sense of movement and secrecy that spoke to the nature of rumors. ''Yu'', a self-proclaimed “anti-literature/ non literature” magazine that paired the work of scientists and artists, took on a design style that echoed the content's radical sense of play. Sugiura explorations with ''Yu'' included dizzying spreads with text blocks that intersected each other from various angles (1975, V. 8), combined faces of the couples featured in the magazine (1976, V. 9), and issue titles printed on the spine made from the initials of the people within the magazine (1976, V. 10).


Books

Sugiura's venture into book design began in the early 1960s when he was brought on as a designer for ''Document 1961'', a book published by Japan Council against A & H Bombs, which included photographs of
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. His involvement in photobooks grew significantly from the late 1960s to 1980s, during which Sugiura worked with famed photographers based both in and outside of Japan, including
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, Ikko Nakahara,
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, and
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. At a time when photobooks were generally regarded as a reproduction of original images, Sugiura’s approach to book design was notable in that the photobook itself was meant to be considered its own original work.Kaneko, Ryuichi and Ivan Vartanian. 日本ん写真集史1956-1986. Kyoto: Akaaka, 2009: 19. Through the medium of a book with its own unique materials, printing techniques, methods of physical engagement, and three dimensionality, Sugiura sought out a sense of materiality and active viewing experience that operated as a separate entity from stand alone photography prints. Sugiura’s design for Kikuji Kawada’s ''The Map'' (地図) (1965) propelled his reputation as a formidable book designer among Japanese art critics and continues to be regarded as a seminal work in the history of photobooks. Given that Kawada photographs include images of the war’s aftermath and shadow like imprints burned into the walls of the Atomic Bomb Dome, Sugiura wanted to design a book that would necessitate longer and more intimate interactions with the book.Kaneko and Vartanian, 日本ん写真集史1956-1986, 86. ''The Map'' features a book of Kawada’s work, a brown insert of text by Kenzaburo Ōe, and a two part slipcase. When the exterior part of the slipcase is removed, the interior part encases the book with 2 sets of doors (a panel on each edge of the book). When all four panels, the reader can see have words, related to images’ content, printed in a list wrapping around the circumference of the book — though the orientation of the text would require one to rotate the entire case in order to read it. Within the photobook, each page is folded so that a single spread contains outer image and hidden inner images, once again requiring greater physically engagement than a standard book. Sugiura joined the folded pages through an uncommon binding process that relied solely on glue. Sugiura's play with the notion of materiality is seen in other photobooks like Yutaka Takanashi's ''To the City'' (都市へ) (1974) for which a large moon-like aluminum circle is placed on top of the front cover but also extends to books in other genres including the artist monograph ''Tetsumi Kudo'' (1969), in which small scale figurines created by the artist are set within enclaves carved into the pages. Sugiura's emphasis of the medium's three dimensionality is evidenced further in his detailed utilization of every available surface within a book. In his all black book depicting the cosmos, ''Summa Cosmographica'' (1979), an image of either the
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or Flamsteed's chart of the constellations is revealed on trim edge depending on the tilt of the pages. For the design of ''Tough Woman Like a Spinning Top'' (ぶっちんごまの女'')'' (1985), a book about the Meiji courtesan grandmother of the author and painter Shinichi Saitō, features a landscape painting of the red light district
Yoshiwara was a famous (red-light district) in Edo, present-day Tokyo, Japan. Established in 1617, Yoshiwara was one of three licensed and well-known red-light districts created during the early 17th century by the Tokugawa shogunate, alongside Shima ...
that wraps around from the front end sheets, across the fore edge, and ending at the back end sheets. In the case of multivolume collections, such as the writings of
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(ライプニッツ著作集) (Kōsakusha, 1988–1999) or
Louis-Ferdinand Céline Louis Ferdinand Auguste Destouches (27 May 1894 – 1 July 1961), better known by the pen name Louis-Ferdinand Céline ( , ) was a French novelist, polemicist and physician. His first novel ''Journey to the End of the Night'' (1932) won the ''Pri ...
(セリーヌの作品集) (Kokusho Kankōkai, 1978–2003), multiple images are printed on the spines so that the combined display of all the volumes doubles as a visual showcase of the writers.


Asian design and iconography research

Sugiura's consciousness of Asia began as a child with his attraction to Asian folk music and grew during a his time teaching at Ulm, where he acquired a new found self-awareness about Asian identity. However, Sugiura's preoccupation with the question of defining Asian design and iconography was informed by his trip to India in 1971 when he was sent under UNESCO Development Program in order to survey the state of Indian printing and create seminars on printing development in the country. Sugiura then began producing and compiling research on ancient Asian cosmologies, calligraphic traditions, iconography, and general culture that spanned across the multiple countries within the Asian continent. The regional breadth of his research interests speak to one of the core tenets of his theories — many of the multilayered symbols and iconography of various Asian countries have shared origins that are independent from Western traditions. Through the Asian Cultural Centre for UNESCO, Sugiura has published his research in the periodicals Asian Culture and APC. He has also created award-winning luxurious book sets that evidence his deep understanding of these cosmologies, such as ''The Mandalas of the Two Worlds'' (伝真言院両界曼荼羅) (1977) and ''Tibetan Mandalas - The Ngor Collection'' (西蔵曼荼羅集成:チベット・マンダラ) (1983). In addition to his leadership of the Asian Design Institute, Sugiura continues to promote the study of Asian design through lectures, academic publications, and exhibitions. Link to Asian Design Institute's activity.


Publications designed by Sugiura


Magazines


Books

* Kawada, Kikuji. 地図 = ''The Ma''p. Tokyo: Bijutsu Shuppan-sha, 1965. * Narahara, Ikko. ヨーロッパ・静止した時間 = ''Europe: Where Time Has Stopped''. Tokyo: Kashima Kenkyujo Shupankan 1967.  * Haniya, Yukou. ''Black Horse in the Darkness''. Tokyo: Kawadeshobo Shinsha, 1971. * Takanashi, Yutaka. 都市へ = ''Towards the City''. Izara Shobo (Yutaka Takanashi, Self-Published), 1974. * Miyauchi, Yoshihisa et al., ed. ''The World of Isamu Kenmochi''. Tokyo: Kawadeshobo Shinsha, 1975. * ''Lithographs of Bayrle: City''. UNAC Tokyo, 1977. * 伝真言院両界曼荼羅 = ''The Mandalas of the Two Worlds''. Photographs by Yasuhiro Ishimoto. Tokyo: Heibonsha, 1977. * Matsuoka, Seigo, ed. 全宇宙誌 ''='' ''Summa Cosmographica''. Tokyo: Kousakusha, 1979. * Narahara, Ikko. ''Portici di Luce: Piazza San Marco''. UNAC Tokyo, 1981. * Takahashi, Eiichi. ''Four Seasons of Hyotei.'' Tokyo: Shibata Shoten, 1982. * Gyatso, Sonam. 西蔵曼荼羅集成:チベット・マンダラ= ''Tibetan Mandalas - The Ngor Collection''. Tokyo: Kodansha, 1983. * Hosoe, Eikoh. 薔薇刑 = ''Ordeal by Roses.'' New York: Aperture, 1985. Photographs of
Yukio Mishima , born , was a Japanese author, poet, playwright, actor, model, Shintoist, Nationalism, nationalist, and founder of the , an unarmed civilian militia. Mishima is considered one of the most important Japanese authors of the 20th century. He was ...
. * Saito, Tadao, ed. 古凧の美 日本古凧絵四十選 = ''Beauty of Old Kites: Forty Selected Japanese Kite Paintings''. Miraisha, 1987. * Aida, Mitsuo. ''Thank You All''. Tokyo: Diamond-sha, 1988. * Unagami, Masaomi, ed. ''Collected Works of Teppei Ujiyama''. Fukuoka: Nishinihon Shimbunsha, 1989. * Nakamura, Makoto and Shigeo Fukuda. ''One Hundred Smiles of Mona Lisa''. UNAC Tokyo, 2004. * Publications about Sugiura's design * Sugiura Kohei et al. 疾風迅雷―杉浦康平雑誌デザインの半世紀 = ''Wind and Lightning: A Half-Century of Magazine Design by Kohei Sugiura''. Tokyo, DNP Graphic Design Archive. 2004. * ''Luminous Mandala: Book Designs of Kohei Sugiura''. Tokyo: Ginza Graphic Gallery, 2011. * Sugiura Kohei et al. 杉浦康平・脈動する本——デザインの手法と哲学  = ''Vibrant Books: Methods and Philosophy of Kohei Sugiura’s Design''. Tokyo: Musashino Art University Museum and Library, 2010. * Sugiura Kohei et al. 時間のヒダ、空間のシワ ... 間地図試み:杉浦康平ダイアグラムコレクション = ''Experiments in "Time Distance Map": Diagram Collection by Kohei Sugiura''. Toyo: Kajima Institute Publishing, 2014. * (3 Volume Series) 杉浦康平デザインの言葉: 多主語的なアジア (2010); アジアの音・光・夢幻 (2011); 文字の霊力 (2014).


External links

Kōhei Sugiura Design Archive
(Japanese)― A large visual library of Sugiura's publication designs and design methodology, presented by the Musashino Art University Museum & Library. This archive also features an exhaustive list of projects and achievements.


Sources

* Kaneko, Ryuichi and Ivan Vartanian. 日本ん写真集史1956-1986. Kyoto: Akaaka, 2009. * Sugiura Kohei et al. 疾風迅雷―杉浦康平雑誌デザインの半世紀 = ''Wind and Lightning: A Half-Century of Magazine Design by Kohei Sugiura''. Tokyo, DNP Graphic Design Archive. 2004. * Sugiura, Kohei. ''The Way of Asian Design'' ― ''Kohei Sugiura: Graphic Design Methodology and Philosophy''. Edited by Kirti Trivedi. Mumbai: Asian Design and Art Research Group, 2015. * Usuda, Shoji. 杉浦康平のデザイン. Tokyo: Heibonsha, 2010.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Sugiura, Kohei 1932 births Living people Japanese graphic designers Tokyo University of the Arts alumni