Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Artist of the Day, June 14, 2026 : Rei Yoshimura, a Japanese graphic artist (#2578)

Reijiro "Rei" Yoshimura (1939) is an influential Japanese graphic designer renowned for creating some of Japan's most recognizable corporate identities and modernist logos. His career successfully bridged Eastern and Western corporate aesthetics, stemming from his early experience working at the legendary American firm Lippincott & Margulies before establishing his independent practice with offices in New York and Japan.

Yoshimura's design philosophy prioritizes hyper-minimalism, geometric precision, and deep symbolic meaning. He often integrated corporate core principles directly into abstract shapes to develop timeless brand marks.

Major Design WorksMazda Logotype (1975): Working alongside the prominent corporate identity firm PAOS, Yoshimura designed Mazda’s highly successful geometric wordmark. His version famously featured a distinct diagonal cut through the horizontal bars of the letter "Z" to represent dynamism, recovery, and character.

Tokyo Metropolitan Government Symbol (1989): Yoshimura won a highly competitive design contest featuring legendary Japanese design masters to create this iconic public crest. Composed of three simple green arcs, the mark beautifully mimics a ginkgo leaf—the official metropolitan tree—while subtly outlining the letter "T" for Tokyo.

Yokogawa Electric Corporation Logo (1986): Inspired by the sun as a fundamental provider of energy, Yoshimura designed a distinctive diamond emblem for Yokogawa. The sharp interior lines convey technological precision, while the outer curves symbolize empathy and partnership.Itoki Logo (1985): For this historic office equipment brand, he arranged nine slanted, diagonal strokes inside a 3x3 square matrix. The layout was inspired by the traditional view of the number nine representing completeness, while the slanted direction captures a sense of forward momentum.

Daiei Supermarket Logo (1975): Developed in collaboration with PAOS, the classic logo features an abstract shape evoking a "waxing moon" to reflect the brand's potential for ongoing growth and evolution.

© 2026. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Rei Yoshimura or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only 


Rei Yoshimura

Coca-Cola "Arden Square", 1969 
– When at Lippincott & Margulies

First Minneapolis Logo, 1971
– When at Lippincott & Margulies
Miroku Firearms Mfg. Co. Logo, 1971
Barnes Engineering Company Trademark, 1972
Kyowa Carbon Co. Trademark Logo, 1973
Chuo Trust & Banking Co. Logo, 1974
Daiei, Inc. Logo Proposal, 1974
Daiei food chain logo, 1975
Daiei food chain logo, 1975
Kubota Proposed Corporate Emblem, 1975
Mazda Corporate Identity Manual, 1975
Jimmy's Corporate Logo, 1978
Key Bank, 1979
Kyowa identity, 1981
Corporate identity, 1985
Corporate identity, 1985
Corporate identity, 1985
Japan Tobacco Inc. Corporate Logo, 1985
The Bank of Kyoto Corporate Logo, 1985
The Asahi Shimbun Company Logo Proposal, 1986
Logo Proposal, 1986
American Motors Corporation Corporate Logo, 1988 
– When at Lippincott & Margulies
Corporate Logo, 1988 
Tokyo Metropolitan Government, 1989 

Monday, July 13, 2026

Artist of the Day, July 13, 2026 : Guido Molinari, a Québecois painter, (#2577)

 Guido Molinari OC RCA L.L. D. ( 1933 –  2004) was a Canadian artist, known nationally and internationally for his serial abstract paintings and their dynamic interplay of colors and focus on modular shapes. His Stripe series is especially celebrated. Molinari himself described their effect - and the effect of all his paintings - as creating a new kind of fictional space "because it happens in the mind and yet also involves the totality of perception".

Molinari was born in Montréal, Québec into a family originally from the Abruzzo region in Italy. He was the son of Charles Molinari, a musician with the Orchestre des concerts symphoniques de Montréal and first president of the Québec Musicians' Association; and of Evelyne Dini, the daughter of a sculptor so his childhood was culturally rich. He began painting at age 13 and later enrolled at the School of the Art Association of Montréal, studying with Marian Dale Scott and Gordon Webber. A year later he contracted tuberculosis. While he was convalescing, he studied existentialism, reading authors such as Sartre, Camus, Piaget and Nietzsche. He did not complete his formal training in art but found his own path.

Early in his career, Molinari read a 1955 article about Jackson Pollock dripping paint onto canvas and went to New York to paint abstractly. He then returned to Montréal where he held his first solo exhibition at L'Échourie, founded the Galerie L'Actuelle with Fernande Saint-Martin, his future wife and was one of the founding members of The Non-Figurative Artists' Association of Montréal in 1956. Between 1963 and 1969, he created hard edge paintings consisting of color in vertical bands of equal width placed on a flat picture plane called the Stripe series. The National Gallery of Canada, acquired a canvas from the series.

Molinari was selected by Lawrence Alloway for the Guggenheim International Award 1964 exhibition. His paintings were seen in New York, Honolulu, Berlin, Ottawa and Buenos Aires. In 1965, his works appeared in The Responsive Eye at the Museum of Modern Art in New York along with works by artists such as Frank Stella. They were also seen in The Deceived Eye in Fort Worth, Texas; and in a fourth show, a New York solo exhibition at East Hampton Gallery. His work was described by reviewers in glowing terms as "Pop spelled 'Pow!'— in these handsome paintings the message comes across visually".

Molinari taught for 27 years at Sir George Williams University and Concordia University, retiring in 1997. In 2004, Concordia recognized him with a posthumous honorary doctorate.

In 1997, he established the 'Molinari Quartet' through the Molinari Foundation, a group that has been active now for twenty-five plus years.

© 2026. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Guido Molinari or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only


 Guido Molinari
Abstraction, 1953
Sans titre, 1954
Sans titre, 1954
Sans titre (from the Noir et blanc or Calligraphies series), 1955
 Sans titre, 1955
Angle noir, 1956
Noir/Blanc, 1956
Sans titre (from the Noir et blanc series), 1956
Sans titre (from the Calligraphies series), 1958
Equilibrium, 1959
Contrepoint, 1960
Sans titre, Octobre 1962
Parallèles bleues, 1963
Sans titre, 1963
Espace orange-bleu, 1964
Mutation Rhythmique, 1964
Mutation vert et rouge (left) and Bi-sérielle vert-bleu (right), 1964-67
Mutation rythmique rouge-orangé, 1965
Bi-sérielle vert-rouge, 1967
Sériel bleu-ocre, 1967
Sériel vert-violet, 1968
Structure, 1970
Opposition triangulaire, 1971
Structure triangulaire gris-brun, 1972
Triangulaire jaune-orange, 1974
Deux marrons, 1992
Continuum rouge et bleu (from the Continuum series), 1998
R.M. Schafer's Seventh String Quartet, 1998
Sans titre, 1999