Multi-Media Designer and Art Director.

About

Name

Yumi Yamazaki

Discipline

Multi Media Designer

Current

Art Director at Sup Inc.

Location

Los Angeles, CA

I am a Multi-Media Designer working across 2D and 3D space.

I have extensive experience as a concept artist for industries including film, games, fashion, and technology. I have recently brought my expertise to spatial design, working on theme parks and art installations. In my free time, I enjoy creating bodies of traditional artwork for gallery exhibitions.

Previous clients include Walt Disney Imagineering, Mycotoo Inc, Sup Inc, Mattel, and Jam City.

For inquiries contact, yumiy.studio@gmail.com

What this exhibition explores

The Shape of Knowledge examines how images preserved in old books—engravings, diagrams, botanical drawings, astronomical charts, early photographs—gave form to ideas long before modern visualization tools existed.
The exhibition explores the ways in which people once interpreted nature, science, society, and the cosmos through images, revealing how knowledge was shaped, structured, and communicated visually.

Why this exhibition was conceived

The exhibition begins with a simple question: how did earlier generations visualize what they sought to understand?
Many of these images were created not as art objects but as instruments of explanation—yet, when viewed today, they exhibit an aesthetic precision and conceptual ambition that far exceed their original purpose.
The Shape of Knowledge invites viewers to reconsider these works not just as historical artifacts but as evidence of a long-standing human impulse: to give shape to the unknown through observation, imagination, and visual form.

The perspective that shapes this exhibition

Rather than presenting these materials strictly through scientific accuracy or historical chronology, The Shape of Knowledge brings together images from disparate fields—botany, astronomy, geology, sociology—through a shared perspective: the visual shaping of understanding.
The exhibition highlights how each image interprets reality in its own way, constructing meaning through line, structure, scale, and symbol.
Through this lens, the works collectively demonstrate how visual representation has long served as a bridge between the seen and the unseen, the known and the not-yet-understood.