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The Good Design Award (Japanese: グッドデザイン賞) is an award sponsored by the Japan Institute of Design Promotion, which is given to things with excellent design every year. [1] [2] It is the only comprehensive evaluation and recommendation system of design in Japan. [3] [4] The Chicago Athenaeum also sponsors an annual Good Design ...
The Japan Institute of Design Promotion (Japanese: 公益財団法人日本デザイン振興会) is a Japanese design institution. Originally called the Japan Industrial Design Promotion Organization, it was founded in 1969 [1] with the goal of promoting industrial design. It issues annual Good Design Awards. [2]
Good Design Award (Museum of Modern Art), awarded between 1950 and 1955 in the context of the exhibition series Good Design at the Museum of Modern Art, New York and the Merchandise Mart, Chicago Good Design Award (Japan) is an award sponsored by the Japan Institute of Design Promotion
Japan: Good Design Award: Japan Institute of Design Promotion: Product that can bless and enrich society and people's lives through its design [21] Japan: Kyoto Global Design Award: Kyoto Global Design Awards: 8 categories: BEST 100, Environment, Industrial, Visual, Trend, Theory, Real Estate, Restaurant/ Hotel/ Bar Design [22] Japan: Mainichi ...
She is a Japan Design Committee member. [2] Select awards ... 2010 – Good Design Gold award [13] 2008 – Red Dot product design award [14] 2008 – iF Award;
Masahiro Mori (森 正洋, Mori Masahiro, November 14, 1927 – November 12, 2005) was a Japanese ceramic designer born in Saga Prefecture, Japan.The well known "G-type Soy Sauce Bottle" he designed in 1958 won the 1st Good Design Award in 1960 and its production and sales have continued until today (as of December 11, 2011).
Pages in category "Japanese awards" The following 50 pages are in this category, out of 50 total. ... Golden Pheasant Award; Good Design Award (Japan) H. Higashikawa ...
The Good Design exhibition series was an industrial design program organized by the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York, in cooperation with the Merchandise Mart in Chicago, held between 1950 and 1955. No awards were granted to designers whose work was put on view in these exhibitions, despite misinformation suggesting otherwise.