Lives and works in Kanagawa.
1978 Born in Japan
2001 Graduated from Architectural Design program, School of Arts, Nihon University (JP)
2004-2006 Graduated from Master program in Design, Art Department, Tsukuba University (JP)
” Japanese people unconsciously experience the action of folding on a daily basis, and therefore encounter various folded forms.I think there must be a special meaning for Japanese people through this everyday practice, folding.
A particular charm occurs in the simplicity with which the expression appears having never been touched by any tool.
Only by folding one piece of paper an expressive masterpiece can be created. This is the Japanese way of folding.In order to link the past with future generations regarding the form of folding, I do not limit myself to the category of origami but consider the pursuit of any possibility of folding paper. “– Yuko Nishimura
Paper
110 x 110 cm
Paper
80 x 80 cm
Paper
110 x 110 cm
Paper
110 x 110 cm
Paper
125 x 125 cm
Paper
100 x 300 cm