Issey Miyake, designer known as the prince of pleats, dies at 84 (2024)

Issey Miyake, a Japanese fashion designer who became known as the prince of pleats and was widely admired for his bold style and innovative cuts, died Aug. 5 in Tokyo. He was 84.

His death was announced Tuesday by the Miyake Design Studio, which told Japanese media that the cause was liver cancer.

Soon after he launched his design studio in 1970, Mr. Miyake rose to stardom in the fashion world, drawing wide acclaim for his fusion of Eastern and Western influences and his experimentation with natural and synthetic materials. He was best-known for his pleated clothing, which resisted wrinkles and evoked traditional origami, as well as for making the black turtlenecks that became a sartorial signature of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs.

Working at times with unusual materials — plastic, paper, wire, jute, foil, yarn — Mr. Miyake designed free-flowing garments as well as handbags, watches and fragrances that bore his name. His clothes weren’t form-fitting like those of his Western counterparts, as he championed freedom of movement and often began his sleek designs with a single piece of cloth. His garments were frequently made with minimal decoration and detail, in sweeping shapes and block colors.

Advertisem*nt

“To me, clothes should not be things which confine or enclose the body. … Clothes should make one free and feel like being oneself,” he said in a 1988 lecture at Rutgers University. “I think they are one of the best ways of expressing the liberation of the body and the mind. Maybe I make tools. People buy the clothes and the clothes become tools for the wearer’s creativity.”

GET CAUGHT UP

Summarized stories to quickly stay informed

A year of record global heat has pushed Earth closer to dangerous thresholdSparkleSummary is AI-generated, newsroom-reviewed.
Border agents begin turning back migrants under new Biden restrictionsSparkleSummary is AI-generated, newsroom-reviewed.
Man in Mexico dies in first known human case of H5N2 bird flu variantSparkleSummary is AI-generated, newsroom-reviewed.
Renting a beach house? Here’s what travel experts say you should pack.SparkleSummary is AI-generated, newsroom-reviewed.

His designs have been worn by a multitude of celebrities and displayed at museums around the world. There are 136 Miyake stores in Japan and nearly as many others worldwide.

Mr. Miyake was born Kazumaru Miyake in Hiroshima, Japan, on April 22, 1938. He was 7 when the United States dropped an atomic bomb on the city in 1945 at the close of World War II, killing tens of thousands of people and leading to the deaths of many others. His mother died of radiation poisoning three years later.

Advertisem*nt

For decades, Mr. Miyake avoided discussing the attack, saying he preferred “to think of things that can be created, not destroyed.” But in 2009 he reflected on the bombing in an op-ed for the New York Times, urging President Barack Obama to visit Hiroshima and commemorate its victims.

“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 — I remember it all,” Mr. Miyake wrote.

“I did not want to be labeled ‘the designer who survived the atomic bomb,’ and therefore I have always avoided questions about Hiroshima,” he added. “They made me uncomfortable. But now I realize it is a subject that must be discussed if we are ever to rid the world of nuclear weapons.”

In Okinawa, a push to revive a lost tattoo art for women, by women

Mr. Miyake studied graphic design at Tama Art University in Tokyo and later went to Paris, where he worked as an apprentice for designers Hubert de Givenchy and Guy Laroche. He also witnessed the student occupations and general strikes of May 1968, an experience that inspired him to design clothing for “the many rather than for the few,” as he put it.

He worked in New York City before returning to Japan in 1969 to launch his own studio, and soon became one of the first Japanese designers to show in Paris.

By the early 1980s, Mr. Miyake had started designing corporate uniforms, including a nylon jacket with detachable sleeves for employees at Sony. According to Walter Isaacson’s 2011 book “Steve Jobs,” the Apple executive sought something similar for his staff. That idea was quickly dismissed by employees, but Jobs became friends with Mr. Miyake and took to wearing the designer’s black turtlenecks, often pairing them with stiff blue jeans and white sneakers.

Advertisem*nt

“He made me like a hundred of them,” Jobs told Isaacson, showing off a stack of turtlenecks in his wardrobe. “I have enough to last for the rest of my life.” (Jobs died in 2011.)

Mr. Miyake was deeply private, and no information on survivors was immediately available. In interviews, he often said that he tried to look toward the future in his work.

“All I can do is to keep experimenting, keep developing my thoughts further,” he said in 1998. “Certain people think that the definition of design is the beauty or the useful, but in my own work, I want to integrate feelings, emotion. You have to put life into it.”

Harrison Smith contributed to this report.

Issey Miyake, designer known as the prince of pleats, dies at 84 (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Dong Thiel

Last Updated:

Views: 5704

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (79 voted)

Reviews: 86% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Dong Thiel

Birthday: 2001-07-14

Address: 2865 Kasha Unions, West Corrinne, AK 05708-1071

Phone: +3512198379449

Job: Design Planner

Hobby: Graffiti, Foreign language learning, Gambling, Metalworking, Rowing, Sculling, Sewing

Introduction: My name is Dong Thiel, I am a brainy, happy, tasty, lively, splendid, talented, cooperative person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.