Latest News:

【Fantasy Archives】

Paper Moon

By Sadie Stein

Our Daily Correspondent

Images via Amusing Planet

Images via Amusing Planet

There is no time that is not hard and complicated. Disaster is never far away. But in the immortal words of Fred Rogers, “When I was a boy and I would see scary things in the news, my mother would say to me, ‘look for the helpers. You will always find people who are helping.’” This can be hard for grown-ups to remember when buildings explode or planes vanish out of the sky.

One of the true helpers, if you ask me, was Akira Yoshizawa, whose work stopped me in my tracks when someone shared it with me earlier today. “The grandfather of origami” was born on March 14, 1911, in Kaminokawa, Japan. Until his forties, he lived in poverty, choosing to devote himself wholly to the art of paper-folding. He was frequently inspired by nature.

Fox

With the publication of his first monograph, New Origami Art, in 1954, he gained substantial recognition, and shortly thereafter opened Tokyo’s International Origami Centre. By the time of his death, at ninety-four, his origami had been exhibited at the Louvre, he had been named to the prestigious Order of the Rising Sun, and his Yoshizawa–Randlett folding system, composed of the now-familiar arrows and diagrams, had become the worldwide standard.

Dog

While his craftsmanship and commitment were far beyond the reach of most people, Yoshizawa had an endearingly democratic streak; he often proselytized the meditative pleasures of origami. In his famous words, “Overall, I want you to discover the joy of creation by your own hand. … The possibility of creation from paper is infinite.”

 

Related Articles

  • From the Cloakroom, at the Booker by Jonathan Gharraie
    2025-06-25 19:39
  • Pizza guy rescues lost dog during cutest food delivery ever
    2025-06-25 19:37
  • Cry of the Week: 'Love Actually' Red Nose Day teaser reminds us love is all around
    2025-06-25 18:46
  • 'Business and politics are inseparable' says our favorite Silicon Valley tweeter
    2025-06-25 18:43
  • Life Outside of Academia; Ghost Stories by Lorin Stein and Sadie Stein
    2025-06-25 18:33
  • Twitter hails 'braveheart' mother who jumped on a leopard to save her son
    2025-06-25 18:30
  • Concept design puts stunning U
    2025-06-25 18:25
  • Future of farming: smart autonomous drones with eyes on the field
    2025-06-25 17:54
  • Where the Vile Things Are
    2025-06-25 17:39
  • Twitter floats the idea of a service like Tweetdeck, but you pay for it
    2025-06-25 17:37

Popular

Top Reads

Recommendations