Notes & Links on
art, design, creativity and technology
on
simplicity

 

Kenya Hara, famous designer and creative director of Muji, on Japanese aesthetics:

A central aesthetic principle in Japan is simplicity, but it is different from simplicity in the West. Let me explain the difference by comparing cooking knives. The knives made by the German company, Henckel, for example, are well crafted and easy to use because they are highly ergonomic. The thumb automatically finds its place when you grab the knife.

Japanese cooks who have special skills prefer knives without any ergonomic shape. A flat handle is not seen as raw or poorly crafted. On the contrary, its perfect plainness is meant to say, “You can use me whichever way suits your skills.” The Japanese knife adapts to the cook’s skill (not to the cook’s thumb). This is, in a nutshell, Japanese simplicity.

The knife’s simple shape is not seen as poor or raw. Beauty beyond fanciness is an aesthetic principle that is sleeping at the bottom of Japanese perception. A guiding principle also to Japanese high tech architecture and the minimal products of Muji.

(via iA)

Theresa sent me this super effective infographic-in-action at Trader Joe’s. Excellent! It looks low key, but it’s got subtle and effective details such as the Trader Joe’s side written in handwriting to make it more human, and the corporate side looking like some PowerPoint nightmare.

Node Power Outlet by Metaphys Design

Imagine if the power outlet above and this recessed power outlet had babies. That would be the most perfect outlet ever.

22 Series Recessed Power Plug by Bocci

Cast aside the cover plate and contemplate the simplicity of a three-pronged plug laid bare. The 22 is a seamless suite of electric sockets designed to fit flush on any wall surface. From Bocci.

Extreme subtlety excites me.

On Myself, Beginning to Make Connections, and Starting a Box

In the spirit—or, rather—habit of Twyla Tharp, I’m starting a box. It’s tentatively called: Creativity Box. The thoughts have been stewing and now I’m psyched to officially get the ball rolling on whatever this might lead to.

Anything I want to drop in the box will be tagged “creativity-box.” I also changed my sidebar text, to reflect this refined trajectory: 

These images, quotes, videos, and sounds spark something within me, so I’m collecting them. I don’t know what they’ll amount to, but I think that it’s important to keep track of my influences and the connections between them. Call this a tagged, searchable database of inspiration.

And here’s the first thing I’m throwing into the box:

This is a combination of writing from my notebook in the past week, and thoughts from tonight’s coversation, which I partially, semi-secretly recorded, and am transcribing.

I am an impractical person. I am an idealist. I am a hypocrite.

However, I’d rather apologize, time and time again, for being an impractical, idealist, hypocrite than try to justify it with somber grown-up logic. I want to call upon the simplicity of how toddlers can make intellectual arguments: “Because yes,” “Because no,” or “Because I am.”

Thank you Merlin Mann (for Twyla), Twyla Tharp (for boxes), Paula Scher (for somber vs. serious), and John Maeda (for intellectualizing toddlers).