"Edisni tuo" is a furniture series that explores themes such as reversal, movement, and cultural reinterpretation.
At the center of it is a simple yet deep gesture, physically and conceptually "turning up" logs from inside to outside. This project is an important turning point in Rio Kobayashi's production activities, and it is one of the early works in Japan for him who spent more than half of his life outside Japan, not a nostalgia, but a "return" reconstructed from distance and western perspective. Just as "Uramaki sushi" wrapped with seaweed on the inside is a western reinterpretation of Japanese cuisine, Edisni tuo's work also reverses "natural". The bark is left, the cutting surface is exposed, and the part that is usually discarded is put forward as an element.
The idea of movement was born when I visited Yoshino, one of the oldest forestry areas in Japan. Rio Kobayashi and his team explored how the fluctuation can be translated into form, staring at the gently swaying treetops in Yoshino Forest, which is also the source of wood used in this series. As a result, the furniture created as a result, has a casual tremor, and the movement that sways slightly when sitting creates surprises and encourages natural connections and dialogue among neighbors who visit GINZA SIX.
From chairs to stools and benches, this series is a group of works where the strength of Innocence wood and the clarity of modeling coexist.