Ikko Tanaka, Japan

AGI member since 1966

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Tanaka graduated from Kyoto City College of Fine Arts (now Kyoto City University of Arts) in 1950. He joined Kanegafuchi Spinning Mills as a textile designer, Sankei Press in Osaka (1952–57) and later Nippon Design Centre in Tokyo employed him as a graphic designer and art director. He started his own design studio in 1963. Tanaka worked for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics and the Osaka World Expo 1970, where he designed the Japanese historical pavilion. He combined traditional Japanese calligraphy and aesthetics with ‘western’ geometric images and bright colours. He was considered to be a ‘father of graphic design in Japan’. He collaborated with fashion designers like Hanae Mori, Kenzo and Issey Miyake, and had solo exhibitions around the world. His work is in the permanent collections of NY MoMA and Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. In Toronto, Calgary and other cities, he exhibited works in which he expressed his global concern for humanity. AGI lost a great, fine man when Ikko’s heart gave up.

Design work by Ikko Tanaka


    Ikko Tanaka, Japan (1966)

    Ikko Tanaka graduated from Kyoto City College of Fine Arts (now Kyoto City University of Arts) in 1950. He joined Kanegafuchi Spinning Mills as a textile designer, Sankei Press in...

    Read full biography
    Ikko Tanaka, Japan (1966)

    Tanaka graduated from Kyoto City College of Fine Arts (now Kyoto City University of Arts) in 1950. He joined Kanegafuchi Spinning Mills as a textile designer, Sankei Press in Osaka (1952–57) and later Nippon Design Centre in Tokyo employed him as a graphic designer and art director. He started his own design studio in 1963. Tanaka worked for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics and the Osaka World Expo 1970, where he designed the Japanese historical pavilion. He combined traditional Japanese calligraphy and aesthetics with ‘western’ geometric images and bright colours. He was considered to be a ‘father of graphic design in Japan’. He collaborated with fashion designers like Hanae Mori, Kenzo and Issey Miyake, and had solo exhibitions around the world. His work is in the permanent collections of NY MoMA and Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. In Toronto, Calgary and other cities, he exhibited works in which he expressed his global concern for humanity. AGI lost a great, fine man when Ikko’s heart gave up.

    Publications

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    Ikko Tanaka

    (1993)

    GGG Books