"58-44" in Major: abstract calligraphy
Artist
Hidai Nankoku
(Japanese, 1912–1999)
Date1958
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions43 3/4 x 57 inches (111.1 x 144.8 cm)
ClassificationsPaintings
Credit LineAcquired through the Museum Associates Purchase Fund and through the Museum Acquisition Fund
Terms
- Paintings
- Oil
- Canvas
Object number70.038
Label CopyAvant-garde calligraphy (zenei shodo) in Japan after World War II encompassed experimentation with gesture and even with writing as pure form disassociated from its meaning. Hidai Nankoku--the son of Hidai Tenrai (1872-1939), who was considered Japan's father of modern calligraphy-- became a leading proponent of improvising with ink to abstractly express feelings and the unconscious. This work, whose title and brushed graphics evoke musical notation, embodies the artist's approach as he described it in 1959:
Calligraphy is something that comes out through improvisation. I believe that it is improvisational work. It comes out by itself when I am not conscious of it. Even if you were to try to consciously draw/write a line, the line you write will not be the same as the one you intended. It is the same with a musical performer who is unable to perform while thinking.Collections