In 1971, Hideo Motoike founded LEATHERARTS & CRAFTS MOTO, a leather brand focused on custom-made products. Later, on a wandering trip across Europe, Motoike happened across traditional ceramic dolls in Italy. Inspired to create his dolls through the medium of leather, he began to produce tools without any mentor or role model, relying solely on his passion and the images he hoped to craft.
Through daily trial and error, he was able to bring together works that brought together the nostalgic world of Normal Rockwell (whose painting kept alive the daily lives of golden era America) with the realism of those Italian porcelain dolls.
With America’s 1976 bicentennial, a Norman Rockwell exhibition in Tokyo also featured the leather dolls of Hideo Motoike. Thus, a new genre and era of “leather dolls” was born.
In 1997, Motoike’s two sons Daisuke and Sakuto, founded LEATHER & SILVER MOTO. Having both grown up around leather, Daisuke also brought metal engraving skills (learned in Firenze, Italy), while Sakuto brought academic sculptural knowledge. These elements came together to create products with the themes of both tradition and innovation.
To celebrate the company’s 40th anniversary, they launched a new clothing line dubbed “MOTOR,” to share the roots of Moto and Hideo Motoike’s lifestyle. Under his direction, this line offers products inspired by the antique worldview presented through his dolls, as well as a myriad of other cultural influences such as motorcycle, military and Native American.
The “MOTORATORY” (a portmanteau of “MOTO” and “LABORATORY”) project began in 2013. The project’s concept was the creation of a space for new challenges and experimental endeavors, while inheriting the techniques cultivated from half a century of treasured history.
In 2016, Hideo Motoike became the first person in Japan to be certified as a prefectural intangible cultural property holder in leather craft.
In 2020, Daisuke Motoike became an independent designer by launching TAUPE D. MOTOIKE. In 2021, to mark the company’s 50th anniversary, the Motoike Art Museum (the world’s first leather art museum) opened in Tottori Prefecture. In July of the same year, the Minami-Aoyama space was reopened in connection with the Motoike Art Museum as the “Motoike Gallery.”
Hideo Motoike received the Minister of Education Award for his contribution to local culture as a world-class leather craft artist.
MOTO’s factory is located along the Yumigahama coast, facing the Sea of Japan in the western part of Tottori Prefecture. It is almost in the center of the Sanin region, in a town blessed with a rich natural environment, including Daisen to the southeast, the highest mountain in the Chugoku region. To the north lies the Sea of Japan and Nakaumi lake. To west is the southern limit of swans migration, as registered under the Ramsar Convention. In these wonderful surroundings, Hideo Motoike and other artisans have devoted much time to creating this factory. Every day the workshop, filled with the sound of thumping, produces original items made by the hands of these craftsmen, soon to be on their way to customers. We also provide maintenance services and repairs so that our customers can use our products for many years to come. Please note that the workshop is not open to the public. Thank you for your understanding.