Yuri Suzuki

Designer · Sound Designer · Sound Artist

4 articles · Oct 2024Nov 2025

Studios:PentagramYuri Suzuki Studio

In their own words


Articles & interviews

  • Why Irish Design Week 2025 mattered more than ever for the creative sector

    Creative Boom’s article by Tom May explores why Irish Design Week 2025 represented a pivotal moment for Ireland’s creative sector. The event showcased international collaboration, design policy integration, and sustainability initiatives across the country. It highlighted Ireland’s growing influence in global design networks and its commitment to inclusive, distributed creative practice.

    UnthinkC-AlbumPentagramDesign & Crafts Council IrelandEnterprise Irelandbranding
  • "All Flows 2025 Elevates Creative Scene in Milton Keynes"

    Creative Boom’s article covers the 2025 edition of All Flows Festival in Milton Keynes, highlighting its intimate yet high-calibre programme of talks and workshops. Featuring leading designers, artists and studios, the event celebrated experimentation, materiality and connection within the creative community. The piece underscores All Flows’ growing reputation as a boutique alternative to larger design festivals.

    FutureDeluxeMother LondonMa-tt-erBritish LibraryWired UKevent|branding|culture
  • "All Flows Festival Hits Milton Keynes with Top Creative Talents"

    Creative Boom announces the return of All Flows Festival 2025, a boutique creative industries event in Milton Keynes celebrating design, typography, illustration, and innovation. The lineup includes leading figures such as David Pearson, Astrid Stavro, Yuri Suzuki, Seetal Solanki, Liza Enebeis, Tiziana Alocci, and MURUGIAH. The festival emphasizes community, collaboration, and cross-disciplinary inspiration across talks, workshops, and exhibitions.

    Ma-tt-erStudio Dunbar/DEPTAtlasVitraTateevent|culture
  • Yuri Suzuki's 'Sound Toy' tracks emotions for well-being

    Yuri Suzuki has launched his first independent project after leaving Pentagram: a generative sound toy called Sound Patterns for the well-being app How We Feel. Developed with Pinterest’s Ben Silbermann and Yale scientist Andreas Helin, the tool lets users create soundscapes inspired by Japanese cities to match or influence their moods. The project explores how sound can affect emotional states and promote mindfulness.

    Yuri Suzuki StudioPentagramHow We Feeldigital
Yuri Suzuki — Designer Profile · D1S1 Design Spotlight