Yuriko is a London based Designer with over a decade of experience across two countries, two languages, two roles-Designer and Art Director-with a wide range of clients. Previously with W+K, Hochkiss & McCann, and now Dark Horses.
Contact:
yurikoui.london@gmail.com
Working with:
Football Association, Royal Ascot, World Rugby, Nissan, UNIQLO, TOYOTA, Starbucks, DAZN, J.League, Travel Portland, Daily Tohoku Newspaper, G.O.A.T PRINTS, Deloitte, & etc.
Honours:
Sports industry Best on Social 2023
Creative Circle UK Gold
Wieden+Kennedy “Next Generation Acceleration Creator Program” 2018
Good Design Award 2017
Monthly Best Advertising 2016 November
Asahi Newspaper Advertising Award 2016
Tohoku Package Design Award 2014
The Six Art Award 2010
Press:
Creative Moment 2024
Marketing Beat 2024
Design Rush Spotlight 2024
Little Black Book 2024
Brand the change 2024
Campaign 2024
Little Black Book 2023
Creative Review 2023
Campaign 2023
Grafik. 2021
HITOMACHI 2019
BRAIN Magazine May 2018
BAUS Interview 2018
Commercial Photo Magazine December 2015
BAUS BETA CREATOR FILES
BRAIN Magazine December 2015
HANSOKU Magazine November 2015
Working for:
Dark Horses
Designer London, 2021-Present
Warmup
Designer London, 2019-2021
Delivered designs to create a richer brand. She also expanded the visual capability by bringing 3D motion graphics to the company and it became the visual standard. While working for Warmup, she has taught herself 3D motion graphic, also her colleagues taught her what British humour is. When she said her first bad word in the office, her colleagues clapped and said “Welcome to Warmup!”.
Freelance
Designer London, 2018-2019
Moved to London to have an adventure. Worked on design projects & pitches with some of the leading agencies in the UK such as Ogilvy and Single Frame, also produced branding projects directly with clients. Working in a variation of fields including art direction, and designs from brand identity, poster, social media to motion graphic. Through these projects she taught herself the basics of animate & 3D graphic.
Wieden+Kennedy
Next Generation Acceleration Creator (Art) Tokyo, Japan, 2017-2018
Was chosen for the Next Generation Acceleration Creator from many applications in the world. She has produced design and art direction on integrated campaigns for Starbucks, Travel Portland and etc. Also she was called "the little book girl" because she has sent a quirky & risky application when she applied to the position.
Hochkiss
Art Director Tokyo, Japan, 2015-2017
Worked with a wide range of industries as an Art Director with a focus on advertising campaigns, and visual identities. She helped visual communications for global brands such as UNIQLO, TOYOTA, J.League & local businesses to define their design language. She has enjoyed working in the typical Japanese hard-work environment sleeping 3-5 hours every night. In between work & sleep, she also has challenged herself in creative competitions and gained some awards along the way.
Hochkiss, Junior Art Director 2013-2014
Daily Tohoku Newspaper, Design Lead 2014
Alongside working on various projects & clients, she has been temporarily assigned to Daily Tohoku Newspaper which is located in Aomori, Japan as a Junior Art Director and a Lead Designer. Because her boss noticed she was the only person to read the newspaper everyday in the company. The project that she led was very successful and it has got some awards & appeared in many media. While working in Aomori, she enjoyed the local sake & listening to the sounds of the sea.
McCann Erickson Worldwide
Creative Intern Tokyo, Japan, 2013
Worked in close collaboration with many industry professionals to respond to briefs set by real clients like Shu Uemura and SHARP and their needs. Focused on creativity and communications for digital campaigns and interactive experiences.
What a tough woman she is.
Kiyoshi Arase / CEO at The Daily Tohoku Newspaper Inc, 2018
The overall ability of a human being is nurtured in a dimension completely different from the length of one’s life experience. Working with Yuriko made me come to realize such an obvious fact. In her smile shines chivalrously a true strength. What a tough woman she is. Four years ago, in celebration of our 70th anniversary, our company, located in the city of Hachinohe in Aomori prefecture, decided to take on a big project of reforming our newspaper and renewing the brand. The cutting-edge creator who was sent to us, was Yuriko. For the next six months, sleep-depriving, hard-working days continued. Her projects included renewing the typeface of the newspaper title as well as issuing a new media “Economic Monday” which unfolds the world’s economy from a local point of view.
In addition, she took part in the promotion of the newspaper involving a take-over of a supermarket, as well as concepting and producing a sixty-columns-high newspaper wrap. Quite frequently, she would receive multiple emails from the company past midnight, and also had to respond to difficult requests. Despite all the hardships, she showed amazing skills in managing and breaking through. From designing the newspaper to designing the promotion of it, she accomplished perfectly and diligently the design tasks all by herself. In the end, the delivered designs exceeded 120. No shadow was ever casted over her smile which naturally captivated everyone around her.
Economic Monday, of which Yuriko was directly involved in the production as an Art Director and a Designer, won the 2017 Good Design Award. The judges have highly reputed the work as “a one-of-a-kind newspaper with a graphical page design,” and also as “having an infographic-heavy page design that supports the comprehension of the theme.”
The overall process pushed the boundary of what the power of graphics can do to newspaper. However, the biggest gain earned through her continuous battle with a blanket-sized page space was perhaps her confidence in having made the big leap required for her own growth as a creator. Her overall ability as a human being is now shining gloriously more than ever. And of course, she is full of energy as usual.
Hiring Yuriko to join my team was one of the best decisions I have made in my career to-date.
George Steele / Marketing Operation Manager at DiDi, 2022
Hiring Yuriko to join my team was one of the best decisions I have made in my career to-date.
Being the incredibly humble person she is, Yuriko’s CV in 2018 did not give her the credit she deserved for her work and capabilities. In fact, two of my former colleagues who looked at her CV at the time told me not to proceed with her application; I’m glad I ignored that advice.
Not only a fantastic designer, Yuriko has a desire to learn new skills and the motivated mindset required to get her hands dirty and learn them in the field. Yuriko single-handedly brought 3D animation capability to the company we worked for by teaching herself how to master new software. This has since become the company standard and her work has been set as a quality benchmark for all who follow in her footsteps.
More importantly, Yuriko always, without hesitation, prioritised quality over anything else. Whilst deadlines are important, Yuriko consistently insisted on ensuring we had attained the highest level of quality possible before delivering the work, even if that meant playing with deadlines from time to time.
Not once did I ever regret giving Yuriko “a little more time” to complete something she was working on. Not once.
Even after I left the company we both worked for, we stayed in touch and I even reached out to Yuriko later on to help me with the creative work of one of my personal businesses.
I cannot speak highly enough of Yuriko’s abilities as a designer, and qualities as a person, and would be delighted to have the opportunity to work with her again in the future.
Exerting a bottomless power.
Katuo Mizuguchi / ECD at Hochkiss Inc, 2018
Having an older brother and two older sisters, Yuriko is the youngest of four siblings. Two of them are doctors, but her brother has worked at a “male companion club” during his college years, and one of her sisters is a professional pole dancer. It is without a doubt that her upbringing in such an interesting environment has had an influence over the formation of her character. Her calm and quiet gaze that examines her surrounding, her ability to insist herself when necessary, and the ability to carry herself through — using these abilities as her strength, she has chosen a path to “creativity” which is completely different from the paths her family has taken.
When I had the opportunity of working with her as an Art Director and a Designer in creating “Economic Monday” for the Daily Tohoku newspaper, her character helped in reforming the environment of the project entirely.
The mission from the CEO to reform the newspaper in celebration of their 70th anniversary was quite clear, but there were mountains of challenges, including the suspicious eyes of the local reporters to an unknown creator from Tokyo, the difficulty of working together with the in-house designers of the newspaper company, and many more. Even then, Yuriko persistently solved and overcame each challenge, and as a form of sublimation she succeeded in creating a new page space that mainly focused on using infographics. Furthermore, it is certainly by the gift of her aforementioned character that she was able to bring to life a promotion project that utilized a local supermarket as a media.
Do not be fooled by her petite size. This woman by the name of Yuriko — she can exert a bottomless power.
Capturing the vector of intention.
Masakazu Taniyama / CEO, ECD at Taniyama Adverts Inc, 2018
Copy is not a short sentence, but a “vector of intention” that signifies the direction to which a company or a product is heading. The capacity of an Art Director greatly differs depending on whether or not his or her design is created with the understanding of this concept.
Her works clearly show how she understands the very essence of this concept. She is the kind of creator admired by copywriters.
From an Executive Creative Director and Copywriter’s standpoint, I give my hearty recommendation to her with confidence.