Kenya Hara Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy the top 12 famous quotes, sayings and quotations by Kenya Hara.
Famous Quotes By Kenya Hara
Creativity is to discover a question that has never been asked. If one brings up an idiosyncratic question, the answer he gives will necessarily be unique as well. — Kenya Hara
Design is not the act of amazing an audience with the novelty of forms or materials; it is the originality that repeatedly extracts astounding ideas from the crevices of the very commonness of everyday life. — Kenya Hara
The essence of design ... lies in the process of discovering a problem shared by many people and trying to solve it. — Kenya Hara
Colors do not exist separately and independently within nature; they are constantly shifting in response to subtle gradations of light. It is language that, magnificently, gives them clear shape. — Kenya Hara
Successful communication depends on how well we listen, rather than how well we push our opinions on the person seated before us. — Kenya Hara
We must find a balance between "reddish whites," "bluish whites" and "yellowish whites," and decide on the proper length and thickness of the fiber. Then each part of the book can play its proper role: the front cover conveys a powerful silence; the inside cover the purity of first openings; the title page the texture of new beginnings; while the body of the text sets the words and pictures against a clear background, or whispers "touch me!" to the reader's fingertips — Kenya Hara
White is a particularly unusual color because it can also be seen as the absence of color. — Kenya Hara
White exists on the periphery of life. Bleached bones connect us to death, but the white of milk and eggs, for example, speaks to us of life. — Kenya Hara
Verbalizing design is another act of design. — Kenya Hara
White can be attained by blending all the colors of the spectrum together, or through the substraction of ink and all other pigments. In short, it is "all colors" and "no color" at the same time. — Kenya Hara
Because nonbeing longs for being, on occasion it creates a stronger sense of being than being itself. — Kenya Hara
Most eggs are white, regardless of the color of the birds that lay them. Real life dwells within this white. The shell of the egg is like the membrane that forms the boundary between this world and the next, and when it breaks, what emerges is no longer white but imbued with the color of the animal. Is this not the moment when newborn life starts walking towards chaos? — Kenya Hara