Calligraphy is the art of setting words on paper with brush and ink. But why has this ancient system of writing endured despite the invention of faster and more efficient methods of communication? With the advent of keyboards, smartphones and instant messaging, and software that can handle the intricacies of written Japanese, there’s no need for anyone in Japan to resort to brush and ink to get their thoughts across. Yet Shodo—the art of writing with a brush—has maintained its position not only as one of Japan’s most treasured traditional arts but also as a tool for modern living and commerce.
“Calligraphy has endured because there is fundamental beauty that dwells within the characters,” says Koji Sakamoto of the Brand Style Management Department, Design Division at Mazda’s headquarters in Hiroshima, Japan. “When you write with brush and ink, you express feelings and sensibilities that cannot be conveyed via the printed word.”
Calligraphy with ink and brush originated in China and was introduced to Japan in the early fifth century. It later came to be considered one of the four key accomplishments a cultured person should be skilled in: painting, chess, music, and calligraphy.
“Shodo is a world of just two colors, black and white. You create not just with the ink but also with the
KAZUO NISHIKAWA
space you leave untouched.”
In modern Japan, too, those who write beautifully receive respect and open admiration. Learning to handle brush and ink is part of compulsory education, and families send their children for additional after-school lessons. Adults, too, may enroll in Shodo classes or study with a private teacher, sometimes as a hobby or for personal enrichment, but often out of the practical desire to compose their annual New Year’s greetings cards in a fine hand. Department stores employ workers with calligraphy skills to write the personalized messages wrapped around formal gifts. At better Japanese restaurants, the menu of the day may be written out every morning with brush and ink on fine washi paper.
Anyone can connect with the beauty of Japanese calligraphy, says Rie Takeda, an artist who learned Shodo as a child in Japan before moving to Europe more than twenty years ago. Now based in Germany, she creates art that combines calligraphy with other mediums, including paint and collage, while teaching the way of the brush to students of all different nationalities. In addition to private and group lessons, she offers a highly rated course on Domestika, the online learning platform that attracts millions of subscribers worldwide.
“You don’t need to know Japanese to appreciate calligraphy,” Takeda says. “The power of Shodo lies in its adherence to basic principles of Japanese aesthetics, including elegant lines, balanced composition, and the skillful use of empty space. These are foundations of Japanese design that ‘speak’ to everyone.”
They are also the foundations of Mazda’s “Kodo: Soul of Motion” design philosophy. In preparing for Kodo’s launch in 2010, the company commissioned a professional calligrapher to create the imagery for key Japanese-language concepts. “We knew calligraphy would have more impact than something in a regular printed font,” says Sakamoto. “Launching a concept logo is like launching a car; it’s important to make a strong, immediate impression.”
When Mazda’s design team decided in 2018 to update the calligraphy for Jinba ittai, it turned to a surprising source of talent within the company. Members of the team remembered an End of Year’s celebration some years earlier, where employees had shown off party tricks in an informal talent show. Kazuo Nishikawa, a senior principal engineer in the Technical Research Center, opened his act by rolling out a large sheet of paper across the banquet-hall floor. He then gave a dynamic performance with brush and ink, creating, in just minutes, a stunning work of Japanese calligraphy.
Nishikawa had enjoyed calligraphy since childhood, and continued it as a hobby, but he had never done calligraphy professionally for Mazda. Nevertheless, the Brand Style team in design asked Nishikawa to create the new calligraphy. As Sakamoto recalls, “It was a huge advantage for us to be able to work with someone from within the company. Not only is Mr. Nishikawa skilled in calligraphy, but he understands the Mazda design philosophy on the deepest possible level.”
Nishikawa found similarities between the six-month collaboration with the Brand Style team and his regular work as an engineer. “At Mazda, our focus in car design is to create an elegant and refined atmosphere by eliminating all but truly essential elements,” he says. “Calligraphy, too, is guided by a ‘less is more’ aesthetic, which is very much a part of traditional Japanese arts. These commonalities made it easier than I expected to discuss how to balance light and dark, for example, and how to use the space between the brush strokes.”
Mazda’s designers have also taken inspiration from the medium’s brush strokes. In calligraphy, there are movements of the brush called tome (pronounced “toe-meh”), which means to stop and collect energy, and harai (pronounced “hah-rai”), which means to sweep or release. The side profile of the Mazda CX-30, for example, conveys this sense of ‘charge and release’, as though a sweeping brush stroke compels rearward the pent-up energy from the front creating a sense motion.
Sakamoto expects that Mazda will continue to “breathe life into the car” as an ongoing tradition. “And the Japanese aesthetics and the beauty that exist on a delicate balance you see in calligraphy is in-line with our core design philosophy.”
Words Alice Gordenker / Images Alun Callendar