Skip to product information
1 of 9

Torii Stool

Torii Stool

Japan's first work to win the Milano Triennale Gold Prize

Riki Watanabe's work with his whole body of work changed the image of rattan furniture, which was thought to be a seasonal item only for summer.
It is said to have triggered the revival of rattan furniture in Japan.

This product was born from a case study project on housing and furniture in “Modern Living” magazine, and won Japan's first Gold Prize at the 1957 Triennale di Milano.
It is a historical masterpiece that has been a long seller for more than half a century since its launch.

The stool is a perfect example of Mr. Watanabe's sense of how to recognize the flexible and gently bending properties of rattan material and create a perfectly formed piece of artwork.
This stool, commonly known as the “Torii stool,” was not named so by Riki Watanabe, but came to be known as such because of its resemblance to the shape of a torii, a Japanese Shinto shrine gate.

--------------------------------------------------

[Designer] Isamu Kenmochi
[Size]         W 480 x D 250 H 460
[Material]  Rattan

Regular price ¥110,000 JPY
Regular price Sale price ¥110,000 JPY
Sale Sold out
Taxes included.

* Made-to-order product : About 1.5 month for delivery.

* Shipping charges will be added upon payment.

View full details

YMK nagaoka

Established in 2011, the company specializes in rattan furniture in Nagaoka City, Niigata Prefecture. Craftsmen are passionate about making custom-made rattan furniture and repairing and renewing it. The company produces a wide variety of products, including rattan chairs and rattan beds, as well as furniture and interiors for homes, stores, and institutions.

view related items

Rikiwatanabe

Born in Tokyo, graduated from the Woodcraft Departmentat Tokyo Higher School of Arts and Design (now Chiba University) in 1936, and after joined Gunma Prefecture Industrial Arts Center under the direction of Bruno Taut, established his own design office in 1949. He got famous with the low-cost String Chair "Himo Chair" in 1952. In 1956, he formed the Q-designers, which brought about reforms in the early days of after-war Japanese design by inventing the "Torii Stool" and the "Riki Stool," among others. In his later years, he focused on clock design, and the "Riki Clock," named after his own name and released in 2003, became his masterpiece.

view related items