Paper
I learned how to breathe when I was ten years old. In front of me was a blank sheet of washi paper, sumi (ink), and a brush. With my legs folded, I was to mind my posture and quiet my mind. Only when my mind was steady would I kneel forward, pick up the brush to dip in the black ink, set my intention, and exhale as I made my first mark. I remember that day, my very first calligraphy class, so vividly. We practiced one thing and one thing only. A horizontal line across the page, the character for number one. I remember it vividly.
“There’s a mental zone that I enter through repetition. I write the same character over and over again and I get this feeling. But if I acknowledge the zone, the zone ends. So it’s the mind knowing that the zone is coming but pretending like the zone doesn’t exist. If I’m in the zone, I’m maintaining my calm, trying not to embrace the zone. Does this make any sense at all?” the artist Gen Miyamura asks rhetorically, laughing gently. We are in a guest suite, standing in front of one of his pieces he completed for the opening of Aman Tokyo, the character “tobu” (to fly). Outside, spring rain falls. There is a quiet, contemplative mood in the room.
Contrary to the disciplined study of shodo (Japanese calligraphy) drawn with a series of angled brushstrokes, Gen-san’s contemporary take is less representational. His body of work created specifically for this site serves as a focal point of each room, bringing together the subtleties of light and shadow, form and abstraction, restraint and play. Today, Gen-san stands at the table covered with a dark underlay. He is writing the character "ikou" (to rest), and "kokoro" (the heart). As he methodically writes these two words over and over again, the characters seem to lift off the paper and float.