Yohji Yamamoto | |
|---|---|
Yamamoto, February 2010 | |
| Born | (1943-10-03)3 October 1943 (age 82) |
| Alma mater | |
| Occupation | Fashion designer |
| Labels |
|
Yohji Yamamoto (山本 耀司,Yamamoto Yōji; born 3 October 1943[1]) is a Japanese fashion designer based inTokyo andParis. As he considered a master tailor[2] alongside those such asMadeleine Vionnet, he is best known for his avant-garde tailoring featuring Japanese design aesthetics.
Yamamoto has won notable awards for his contributions to fashion, including the Chevalier/Officier/Commandeur ofOrdre des Arts et des Lettres,Medal of Honor with Purple Ribbon,[3] theOrdre national du Mérite, theRoyal Designer for Industry and the Master of Design award byFashion Group International.[4]
Yohji Yamamoto was born on 3 October 1943 inTokyo as the eldest son of his father, Fumio Yamamoto, who ran a company that sold prepared foods to department stores inKabukicho, and his mother, Fumi Yamamoto, who helped with accounting and administrative work. After his father was killed in theBattle of Luzon in thePhilippines during theAsia-Pacific War inWorld War II when Yohji was two, his mother Fumi, who ran acustom-made clothing store (Fumi Clothing Store) inKabukicho. (His maternal grandmother was also a graduate ofBunka Fashion College).
In 1966, at age 23, Yamamoto graduated fromKeio University with a degree in law. He gave up a prospective legal career to assist his mother in her dressmaking business, from where he learned his tailoring skills.[5] He further studiedfashion design atBunka Fashion College, earning his degree in 1969.[6]

Yamamoto debuted in Tokyo in 1977, followed by two more shows; a debut in Paris in 1981 and in New York in 1982.[7] His first collection, under the label Y's, focused on womenswear which reflected typical men's garments, with clothes cut in uncluttered shapes with washed fabrics and dark colors.[8] In an interview withThe New York Times in 1983, Yamamoto said of his designs, "I think that my men's clothes look as good on women as my women's clothing […] When I started designing, I wanted to make men's clothes for women."[9] More recently he has expounded: "When I started making clothes for my line Y's in 1977, all I wanted was for women to wear men's clothes. I jumped on the idea of designing coats for women. It meant something to me – the idea of a coat guarding and hiding a woman's body. I wanted to protect the woman's body from something – maybe from men's eyes or a cold wind."[10]
His main lines, Yohji Yamamoto (women's), Yohji Yamamoto Pour Homme (men's), and Y's, are especially regarded worldwide with runway presentations at each seasonal Paris fashion week. These main lines are also available at his flagship stores in Paris, London, and New York and at high-end department stores. Other principal lines include REGULATION, Costume d'Homme, and discord, among many other diffusion lines for clothes, jewellery, and accessories.
Yamamoto is known for an avant-garde spirit in his pieces, frequently creating designs far removed from current trends. His signature oversized silhouettes often feature drapery in varying textures. Yohji's collections are predominately made in black, a colour which Yamamoto has described as "modest and arrogant at the same time. Black is lazy and easy – but mysterious. But above all black says this: "I don't bother you – don't bother me"."[5]
Poor decisions by finance managers pushed the brand into debts of more than US$65 million in 2009, which angered Yamamoto and led to a companyrestructuring from 2009 to 2010. Theprivate equity firmIntegral Corp was identified as the Japanese company who will restructure the Yohji Yamamoto brand and by November 2010 the company was out of debt.[11]
Since its Paris debut in 1981, the Yohji Yamamoto brand has continued to expand its influence through fashion. In recent times, it has adapted to changing market demands with a leap into the wider creative field with the introduction of a new project titled WILDSIDE.[12]
In 2008, the Yohji Yamamoto Fund for Peace was established to foster development of China's fashion industry and to help heal the long-standing enmitybetween China and Japan.[13] Each year, an emerging Chinese designer will be awarded with a two-year scholarship to a fashion college in Japan or Europe, and a male or female Chinese fashion model will be selected to make a runway debut during the Parisprêt-à-porter season.[14]
Yamamoto has been quoted as saying: "they must have so many angry young people. Being a fashion designer or an artist, you have to be angry."[15] Of the fashion show he staged inBeijing in spring 2008 to launch this initiative, Yamamoto said, "It's not political. I am going to open a store here, then Chinese people will come and shop there, and then they are happy. The real art is making people happy, but also asking questions about society."[16]
Yamamoto's designs recall Japanese drawing techniques.[17]
His technique consists of wide cuts, often oversized, exotic and luxurious materials and elaborate handicrafts. The designer endeavors to make his pieces from the back and not from the front.[18] He favors dark colors.[19]
This section of abiography of a living personneeds additionalcitations forverification. Please help by addingreliable sources.Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced orpoorly sourcedmust be removed immediately from the article and its talk page, especially if potentiallylibelous. Find sources: "Yohji Yamamoto" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR(August 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)