Seikaku Takagi


Seikaku Takagi, was a Japanese calligrapher. He was male and held the rank of Junior Third Rank and was awarded the Order of Culture. His real name was Ikuta Takagi.
He served as the president of the Chōyō Calligraphy Association, advisor to the Japan Fine Arts Exhibition, and senior advisor to the Japanese Calligraphy Institute. He was also the highest advisor to the Yomiuri Calligraphy Association and was recognized as a Person of Cultural Merit. Throughout his career, he held many important positions, including director of the Japan Calligraphy Institute, director and permanent general affairs officer of the Yomiuri Calligraphy Association, and executive director of the Japan Fine Arts Exhibition. He also served as a councilor of the Japan Fine Arts Exhibition.

Career

Early life and education

Born in 1923 in Sōja City, Okayama Prefecture, Seikaku Takagi later enrolled in the former Okayama Prefectural Takahashi Junior High School. Among his classmates was Makoto Munemori, an authority on environmental chemistry who later became an emeritus professor at Osaka Prefecture University. After graduating from the school, Takagi worked at a company and, just before the end of World War II, served for over a year in the military in Tokyo before returning to his hometown.
After the war, he turned to calligraphy as a lifelong pursuit of learning. While working for 20 years at his father's securities firm, he studied under the calligrapher Tsurunobu Uchida in 1947. He researched ancient Chinese and Japanese calligraphy, and he was praised for establishing a modern style that infused deep emotion, particularly as a practitioner of kana calligraphy.

Career as a calligrapher

Under the guidance of Tsurunobu Uchida, Seikaku Takagi studied classical calligraphy and established his own distinctive style, focusing primarily on kana script. He inherited the Chōyō Calligraphy Association, founded by Uchida, and served as its president for many years.In 1982, he became a member of the Japan Fine Arts Exhibition, and in 1991, he was awarded the Prime Minister's Award at the same exhibition. Further recognition followed in 1995 when he received the Japan Art Academy Prize, and in 2006, he was selected as a Person of Cultural Merit. Later, he was awarded the prestigious Order of Culture.
Upon being named a Person of Cultural Merit in 2006, he remarked:
"Kana calligraphy is not merely about conveying meaning through characters; it is an art form that explores sculptural beauty, much like painting. Ink and brush are integral to Japanese culture. Calligraphy is everything to me, and I will devote myself fully to leaving behind great works for future generations."
Even in his later years, he remained active in the calligraphy world, serving as an advisor to the Japan Fine Arts Exhibition, as well as the highest advisor to both the Japanese Calligraphy Institute and the Yomiuri Calligraphy Association.
In February 2017, Seikaku Takagi died at a hospital in Kurashiki City, Okayama Prefecture.

Evaluation as a calligrapher

Seikaku Takagi had a deep connection with Yomiuri Shimbun, which evaluated his work as follows:
*"As a calligrapher, Takagi studied ancient Japanese and Chinese calligraphy, pursuing elegance and refinement in kana script. He established his own distinctive style and made significant contributions to the development of the calligraphy world. He was first selected for the Japan Fine Arts Exhibition in 1950. From 1975, he served as a director of the Japanese Calligraphy Institute, and from 1984, he became a director of the Yomiuri Calligraphy Association, greatly contributing to the advancement of Japanese calligraphy.
▼ Based in Okayama, he studied under Tsurunobu Uchida, the founder of the Chōyō Calligraphy Association. Uchida’s teacher was Seikū Andō, a prominent figure in kana calligraphy, and Takagi fully mastered the calligraphic style of the Motonaga-bon Kokinshū, which was passed down from Seikū. He then delved into the world of ancient calligraphy, studying works such as the Ichijō Sesshō-shū, Kōya-gire, Hari-gire, and Kōgishi-gire, thereby capturing the elegance of the Heian court.
▼ He became one of the leading figures in modern kana calligraphy, in part because he also pioneered new frontiers in large-character kana calligraphy, a style that postwar kana calligraphers sought to develop."*
— ''Yomiuri Shimbun, Yomiuri Biographical Database''

Brief biography

1923: Born in Sōja City, Okayama Prefecture.1941: Graduated from Okayama Prefectural Takahashi High School.1947: Became a disciple of calligrapher Tsurunobu Uchida.1950: First selected for the Japan Fine Art Exhibition.1981: Served as a Nitten juror.1991: Became a new member in the Kana of the 20 Contemporary Calligraphers Exhibition.1995: Appointed as Permanent General Affairs Officer of the Yomiuri Calligraphy Association.
  • * The same year: Director of Nitten.1998, June: Chōyō Calligraphy Association Byōbu Exhibition.1999: Appointed as managing director of Nitten.2000, May: Exhibited at the 2000 Japan Calligraphy Institute Exhibition.2001: Appointed as Director of Nitten.2003, August: Seikaku Takagi Calligraphy Exhibition – The Beautiful World of Hyakunin Isshu & Miyabi.2004, May: Seikaku Takagi Calligraphy Exhibition.
  • * The same year: Appointed as Nitten Councilor.2005: Named Honorary Advisor of the Japan Calligraphy Institute.

Honors and awards

1998: Fourth Class, Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosette.2004: Dark Blue Ribbon Medal and Honorary Citizen of Sōja City.2006, November: Designated as a Person of Cultural Merit.2013, November: Awarded the Order of Culture.2015, September: Dark Blue Ribbon Medal with Rosette and Wooden Cup Set.2017, February 24: Posthumously awarded the Junior Third Rank.