Zürcher Nachrichten - Issey Miyake: seamless innovator of avant-garde style

EUR -
AED 4.353382
AFN 77.05154
ALL 96.6659
AMD 452.980789
ANG 2.12196
AOA 1087.011649
ARS 1715.27374
AUD 1.700138
AWG 2.136683
AZN 2.016962
BAM 1.955717
BBD 2.406598
BDT 146.013807
BGN 1.990725
BHD 0.449081
BIF 3539.949869
BMD 1.1854
BND 1.513236
BOB 8.25665
BRL 6.231058
BSD 1.194849
BTN 109.725346
BWP 15.634337
BYN 3.403256
BYR 23233.834642
BZD 2.403098
CAD 1.611918
CDF 2684.930667
CHF 0.911329
CLF 0.026011
CLP 1027.065402
CNY 8.240602
CNH 8.248669
COP 4350.11551
CRC 591.674907
CUC 1.1854
CUP 31.413093
CVE 110.260324
CZK 24.336607
DJF 212.770976
DKK 7.470147
DOP 75.22681
DZD 154.464449
EGP 55.903629
ERN 17.780996
ETB 185.616528
FJD 2.613392
FKP 0.865856
GBP 0.861451
GEL 3.194656
GGP 0.865856
GHS 13.089445
GIP 0.865856
GMD 86.534664
GNF 10484.555345
GTQ 9.164611
GYD 249.979398
HKD 9.259098
HNL 31.537662
HRK 7.536653
HTG 156.373368
HUF 380.868342
IDR 19883.302315
ILS 3.66336
IMP 0.865856
INR 108.694634
IQD 1565.333613
IRR 49934.963672
ISK 144.986215
JEP 0.865856
JMD 187.242059
JOD 0.840447
JPY 183.458423
KES 154.263458
KGS 103.663312
KHR 4804.796226
KMF 491.940791
KPW 1066.859756
KRW 1719.772596
KWD 0.363823
KYD 0.995758
KZT 600.944514
LAK 25713.909461
LBP 106999.862086
LKR 369.514329
LRD 215.370866
LSL 18.971995
LTL 3.500177
LVL 0.717036
LYD 7.497682
MAD 10.83854
MDL 20.097148
MGA 5339.773538
MKD 61.637386
MMK 2489.728817
MNT 4227.587506
MOP 9.608592
MRU 47.674978
MUR 53.852825
MVR 18.326127
MWK 2071.912129
MXN 20.704153
MYR 4.672852
MZN 75.580739
NAD 18.971995
NGN 1643.533583
NIO 43.968135
NOK 11.414558
NPR 175.560554
NZD 1.959292
OMR 0.458021
PAB 1.194849
PEN 3.994931
PGK 5.114783
PHP 69.837845
PKR 334.292423
PLN 4.212869
PYG 8003.660561
QAR 4.356415
RON 5.097103
RSD 117.395021
RUB 90.53616
RWF 1743.326065
SAR 4.447253
SBD 9.54438
SCR 17.20327
SDG 713.019239
SEK 10.549127
SGD 1.506168
SHP 0.889357
SLE 28.834855
SLL 24857.238699
SOS 682.871039
SRD 45.10505
STD 24535.381029
STN 24.498961
SVC 10.454557
SYP 13110.017057
SZL 18.966196
THB 37.222281
TJS 11.154027
TMT 4.148899
TND 3.433054
TOP 2.854158
TRY 51.401896
TTD 8.112656
TWD 37.456216
TZS 3076.769513
UAH 51.211828
UGX 4271.81883
USD 1.1854
UYU 46.368034
UZS 14607.380494
VES 410.078852
VND 30749.268909
VUV 140.815358
WST 3.213359
XAF 655.929182
XAG 0.014004
XAU 0.000244
XCD 3.203602
XCG 2.153409
XDR 0.815765
XOF 655.929182
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.51038
ZAR 19.104199
ZMK 10670.019447
ZMW 23.449006
ZWL 381.698228
  • RBGPF

    1.3800

    83.78

    +1.65%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    14.65

    -0.41%

  • RELX

    -0.3700

    35.8

    -1.03%

  • AZN

    0.1800

    92.77

    +0.19%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4300

    16

    -2.69%

  • RIO

    -4.1000

    91.03

    -4.5%

  • BTI

    0.4600

    60.68

    +0.76%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    23.76

    +0.21%

  • NGG

    0.2000

    85.27

    +0.23%

  • GSK

    0.9400

    51.6

    +1.82%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    25.86

    +1.43%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.05

    -0.17%

  • BCC

    0.5100

    80.81

    +0.63%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    13.08

    +1.07%

  • BP

    -0.1600

    37.88

    -0.42%

Issey Miyake: seamless innovator of avant-garde style
Issey Miyake: seamless innovator of avant-garde style / Photo: Pierre GUILLAUD - AFP

Issey Miyake: seamless innovator of avant-garde style

Fashion innovator Issey Miyake shook up Parisian style with his highly wearable avant-garde designs, saying he was driven to create clothes that "bring beauty and joy" after witnessing the horrors of Hiroshima.

Text size:

Alongside Rei Kawakubo and Yohji Yamamoto, Miyake was part of a wave of young Japanese designers who made their mark in the French capital from the mid-1970s, following the lead of fashion greats Kenzo Takada and Hanae Mori.

Throughout his global career spanning more than half a century, he pioneered high-tech, comfortable clothing -- side-stepping the grandiosity of haute couture in favour of what he called simply "making things".

Among his inventions were the "Pleats Please" line, permanently pleated items which do not crease, refreshing an old-fashioned concept to exude fluidity and comfort.

The much-copied futuristic triangles of Miyake's geometric "Bao Bao" bag complemented countless chic outfits, and he made more than 100 black turtlenecks for Apple co-founder Steve Jobs.

Miyake also wowed runway audiences with his "A-POC (A Piece Of Cloth)" concept, using computer programming to cut whole garments with no seams.

"When I grow weary with where I'm going, or when I stumble, I'll return to the theme of 'A Piece of Cloth'," Miyake said in 2006 after winning the prestigious Kyoto Prize.

"From ancient times, in Greece or Africa, every culture has started (making clothes) from a single piece of cloth, or skin," he explained.

- Hiroshima survivor -

Born in Hiroshima in 1938, Miyake was just seven years old when the United States dropped an atomic bomb on the city in August 1945, obliterating everything he knew.

He survived the blast, which killed an estimated 140,000 people on impact and led to the end of World War II after the bombing of Nagasaki three days later.

Although the bombing left him with a lifelong limp, he rarely spoke of his trauma, once breaking his silence in a 2009 New York Times article calling for nuclear disarmament.

"When I close my eyes, I still see things no one should ever experience: a bright red light, the black cloud soon after, people running in every direction trying desperately to escape," he wrote.

"I remember it all. Within three years, my mother died from radiation exposure."

In the article, he urged Barack Obama to visit Hiroshima, a wish realised in 2016 when the then US president made a historic trip to the city.

"I have never chosen to share my memories or thoughts of that day. I have tried, albeit unsuccessfully, to put them behind me, preferring to think of things that can be created, not destroyed, and that bring beauty and joy," Miyake wrote.

- 'Open to everything' -

Having graduated from Tama Art University in Tokyo, Miyake moved to Paris in 1965, where he studied at the elite Ecole de la Chambre Syndicale de la Couture Parisienne.

As a cub designer he worked under Guy Laroche and Givenchy, but his outlook was also influenced by the huge student-led uprising of May 1968.

Seeing protests engulf the French capital made him realise "the world was moving beyond the needs of haute couture for the few and towards simple more universal elements such as jeans and T-shirts," Miyake told CNN in 2016.

He established the Miyake Design Studio in Tokyo in 1970, and soon afterwards opened his first Paris boutique.

By the 1980s, his career was in full swing as he experimented with materials from plastic to metal wire and even artisanal Japanese paper.

Teamwork was essential to Miyake, who preferred the anonymity of his research and development lab full of textile scientists and engineers to the bright lights of the catwalk.

"You always see things in a different way when you allow others to become part of a creative process," he told the New York Times.

He pulled back from designing his Paris collections at the turn of the century and has since given a series of talented young designers their big break.

But he continued to oversee the brand, and his obsession with technology endured -- with everything from fabrics to stitching explained in minute detail in the notes of every catwalk show.

Miyake is perhaps especially revered in France, whose former culture minister Jack Lang came to Tokyo in 2016 to award him the Legion of Honour at a major retrospective.

Lang, who still wears Miyake pieces he bought many years ago, described the designer in October 2021 as a "man of a deep humanity, open to everything".

"Issey Miyake is a researcher, a discoverer, a real inventor who conceived of and used new materials and textures the world had never seen," he told AFP.

I.Widmer--NZN