“Design creates emotion. Emotions become memories. From memories come ideas, ideas return to design – I believe that design and memory are in a single cycle, and that each is the same energy in a different state.“ This is how Akira Minagawa describes the core idea, the circular flow, related to the exhibition Design=Memory that was on show at Nationalmuseum February– August 2024.
Akira Minagawa is one of the most prominent Japanese designers and the founder and lead designer of fashion and textile brand Minä perhonen. Minä means I in Finnish, and perhonen means butterfly.
The company started in 1995 as a one-man operation but grew gradually into the team of 200. The sphere of Minä perhonen’s creative activities has expanded from fashion to home décor, tableware, and eventually, to all aspects of daily life. Minä perhonen has a long track record of international design collaborations with companies such as Artek, Kvadrat and Iittala as examples, and in Sweden with Klippan.
The exhibition wanted to explore Akira Minagawa’s and Minä perhonen’s design philosophy from the first ideas to the final products and even beyond: the experiences and memories of the users of the garments and design objects play an important role. Akira Minagawa likes to discuss together with his team how design can – and should – increase happiness in our daily lives. Good designs also ages with grace.
Minä perhonen textiles, clothes, design objects, as well as Akira Minagawa’s original artworks are all in a circular dialogue showcasing the creative process. The exhibition also reminded us how the Nordic countries and Nordic design have always played a key role for Akira Minagawa. The latest example, a collaboration with Ingegerd Råman, was presented for the first time to the audience.