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For the first time in four hundred years, a Japanese tradition has been adopted by contemporary designers. Dutch design duo Scholten & Baijings and Japanese designer Teruhiro Yanagihara created a contemporary collection of Arita porcelain, together with an elite group of designers. The results are first exhibited during Salone del Mobile in Milan, followed by an exhibition in the Rijksmuseum’s Asian Pavilion, together with other similar artworks from the Rijksmuseum collection.
17th century Japanese porcelain redesigned for the first time
2016/ project
Scholten & Baijings and Teruhiro Yanagihara are the creative directors of the 2016/ project. They have been asked by Saga prefecture, the province where Arita is situated, to reshape the future of Arita porcelain to commemorate the cooperation and exchange between the creative industries of The Netherlands and Japan. Sixteen designers from Europe, America and Japan worked with ten porcelain companies to develop contemporary collections of the finest Japanese porcelain using ancient knowhow and traditional practices.
Porcelain originated in the southern Japanese town of Arita in the early 17th century when porcelain stone was found in the mountains around Arita. The porcelain industry that began around 1616 still exists to this day.
The 2016/ collection was designed by Ingegerd Räman (SE), Studio Wieki Somers (NL), BIG-GAME (CH), Christien Meindertsma (NL), Teruhiro Yanagihara (JP), Kirstie van Noort (NL), Tomás Alonso (GB), Christian Haas (DE), Shigeki Fujishiro (JP), Kueng Caputo (CH), Pauline Deltour (FR), Stefan Diez (DE), Scholten & Baijings (NL), Saskia Diez (DE), Leon Ransmeier (US), TAF (SE).
Kakiemon porcelain
Scalloped saucer with rocks, prunus and bird, Anonymous, c. 1670 - c. 1700, Rijksmuseum AmsterdamAn exhibition of Kakiemon porcelain is running simultaneously in the Asian Pavilion. The 15th generation of Kakiemon created impressive objects especially for the Rijksmuseum. These pieces will be displayed alongside 17th century Kakiemon porcelain from the Rijksmuseum collection. Kakiemon is the pinnacle of Japanese porcelain. Produced for generations by the Kakiemon family, it is named after master potter Sakaida Kakiemon (1596-1666). At 110 pieces, the Rijksmuseum has the largest collection of Kakiemon porcelain in the Netherlands.
Scholten & Baijings
Stefan Scholten and Carole Baijings founded their eponymously named design studio in 2000. In an almost non-Dutch design style, they combine minimal forms and a balanced use of colour with traditional handicrafts and industrial production techniques. Scholten & Baijings’ customers include Maharam, Mini, Moroso, Karimoku New Standard, Georg Jensen and HAY, and they have collaborated with, among others, the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum in New York and the Art Institute of Chicago.
Teruhiro Yanagihara
Teruhiro Yanagihara established his design studio in 2002. Since then he has been creating designs for Japanese and international clients. He pushes boundaries with projects that combine contemporary design and Japanese handicrafts. His work includes both products and interiors, and, as creative director, he is the person behind brands such as Karimoku New Standard, 1616 / Arita Japan and currently 2016/. He has worked for Wallpaper*, Kimura Glass, Pallucco, Offecct and Sergio Rossi, among others.
Arita Porcelain Today is on show in the Rijksmuseum’s Asian Pavilion from 22 April to 16 October 2016. The collections will be displayed in a cabinet especially designed for Scholten & Baijngs with the support of Steinfort Glass.