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FOR more than half a century Akira Yoshizawa was the most famous origami
artist in the world. He pioneered origami as a creative art and devised many
new folding techniques. A symbolic notation system of his design is now used
worldwide, allowing enthusiasts to fold his models from books, even if they
do not understand Japanese. In 1963 The Origamian newspaper had
already described him as “a legend in his own lifetime”, and his career
achieved new heights in the following decades.
Akira Yoshizawa was born in 1911 into relatively humble circumstances in
Tochigi prefecture not far from Tokyo. His father was a dairy farmer, and he
had only six years’ schooling. At 13 he moved to Tokyo and worked in a
factory making machine tools but continued his education at evening classes.
He became a technical draftsman at the factory and taught geometry to
apprentices. Being interested in origami he used paper folding as a teaching
aid. His employers were so impressed that they allowed him to practise
origami in work time.
In 1937, aged 26, Yoshizawa left the factory to devote himself full-time to
his boyhood hobby of origami. He eked out a living, doing part-time jobs
when necessary, until the outbreak of war, when he joined the Japanese
medical corps. He was posted as an orderly to a military hospital in Hong
Kong, where he regularly decorated the beds of patients with colourful
origami models. He later became ill himself and so returned to Japan. In
1944 some of his creations were used in a book, Origami Shuko, by
Isao Honda.
His first recognition as an origami artist came in 1951 when Tadasu Iizawa,
editor of the picture magazine Asahi Graph, wanted to illustrate a
feature with origami zodiac symbols. He tracked down Yoshizawa, who was clad
in an old army uniform, his only clothes, and working as a door-to-door
salesman of tsukudani, fish delicacies. The story goes that the
magazine bought him new clothes and put him up in a hotel. He then worked
day and night to design the required zodiac models. The article, published
in January 1952, caused a sensation and Yoshizawa became famous overnight.
Iizawa helped to attract other commissions, and Yoshizawa’s first book, Atarashi
Origami Geijutsu (New Origami Art) appeared in 1954. This was the first
book to use his system of diagram notation which allowed non-Japanese
readers to make the models. This notation, slightly modified by the US
author Sam Randlett in the 1960s, is now used in origami books worldwide.
In 1954 Yoshizawa founded the International Origami Centre in Tokyo, which
started to publish an origami magazine. Interest in his genius continued to
grow, and in 1955 he had his first big exhibition, in Ginza, the Tokyo
shopping area. In October of the same year he began to achieve international
recognition when 300 of his models were shown at the Stedelijk Museum,
Amsterdam. The exhibition attracted many visitors and was reported in the
media across Europe and elsewhere. At the same time Westerners were showing
a growing interest in paper folding — the word origami did not acquire wide
currency outside Japan until the 1960s — thanks to the efforts of Robert
Harbin, who presented an origami TV programme in Britain, and Lillian
Oppenheimer, who founded the Origami Centre of New York. Harbin and
Oppenheimer helped to promote Yoshizawa’s work.
His classic Origami Dokuhon was published as a paperback in 1957. In
1959 Oppenheimer arranged an exhibition of Yoshizawa’s models in the Japan
Centre in New York. It ended in disaster when several visitors — assuming
that the models, being made only of paper, were worthless — picked up the
exhibits as souvenirs. Before the organisers could intervene the exhibition
had vanished.
Yoshizawa’s growing international profile prompted the Japan Foundation to
sponsor him as a cultural ambassador. In that role he travelled widely,
teaching origami and promoting Japanese culture. He visited Britain three
times; he was made a life vice-president of the British Origami Society and
he appeared on Blue Peter in 1983.
According to David Lister, an historian of origami, “Yoshizawa transformed the
art of origami from a somewhat stilted paper craft which used extensive
cutting to what is an art form in every sense.”
When Yoshizawa folded his models there was a special life in them which few
other folders could reproduce. Yoshizawa always refused to sell his models —
he said that he considered them to be his children. He wrote some 18 origami
books, but only a few hundred of his designs were diagrammed — and in 1989
he estimated that he had created more than 50,000 models.
He will also be remembered for originating the sculptural technique of “wet
folding”. This involves spraying water on to a thickish piece of paper which
may then be moulded into three dimensions.
Before the war Yoshizawa studied for two years as a Buddhist priest, and
though he did not enter a monastery, he remained a devout man. He would
often pray before starting a folding session.
Amid the rivalry between Japanese origami groups, Yoshizawa was often accused
of distancing himself from other folders, whom he in turn accused of
stealing his designs.
Westerners visiting him were careful not to mention other Japanese folders for
fear of upsetting him. However, he mellowed in later years.
In March 1998 he was one of several exhibitors at the Louvre in Paris for what
was probably the greatest origami exhibition ever seen, and he was happy to
pose for photographs with a rival folder, Yoshide Momotani.
Yoshizawa received many awards for his origami. In 1963 his book Tanoshi
Origami (Joyful Origami) was awarded the Mainichi Culture award. In 1971
he received the Mobil Children’s Culture Award, and in 1983 the Japanese
Emperor awarded him the Order of the Rising Sun.
Yoshizawa’s first wife, whom he married in 1938, died during or soon after the
war. He is survived by his second wife, Kiyo, whom he married in 1956. She
acted as his manager and taught origami herself.
Akira Yoshizawa, origami artist, was born on March 14, 1911. He died
on March 14, 2005, aged 94.
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