
Honey-Pop Armchair
<p>Tokujin Yoshioka enjoys investigating how traditional materials perform under new circumstances. Honey-Pop is one of the designer’s earliest designs and is self-manufactured. Yoshioka used 120 sheets of glassine (a traditional type of paper for lanterns), glued and then precisely cut, to form each chair. The two-dimensional flat chairs resemble decorations waiting to be opened and gain their three-dimensionality when the layers of paper are unfolded. The honeycomb compositions give the design its strength; there is no other structural framework present. Introducing a degree of personalization into the chair, Yoshioka designed the piece so that the final form is determined when the user sits on it, his or her imprint creating the seat.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 2001
- Dimensions
- 79.4 × 81.3 × 81.3 cm (31 1/4 × 32 × 32 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Tokujin Yoshioka
Artist

Tokujin Yoshioka is a Japanese designer and artist born in 1967 who works across furniture, sculpture, and installation using transparency, light, and unconventional materials. His practice interrogates the boundary between design object and fine art through investigations of glass, acrylic, and crystalline forms that engage with space and perception.
Full artist profile →More
More by Tokujin Yoshioka
Tear Drop Lamp
2007 · Glass and aluminum
Media Skin Cellular Phone
2004 · Plastic
Media Skin Cellular Phone
2004 · Plastic
Media Skin Cellular Phone
2004 · Plastic
Pane Chair
2003 · Polyester fiber
Honey-Pop chair
2001 · Chair
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Tokujin Yoshioka
- Year
- 2001
- Dimensions
- 79.4 × 81.3 × 81.3 cm (31 1/4 × 32 × 32 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-2001-142179
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





