Two calligraphers born in the same year, 1912, chart radically different paths through modernism in this pairing of Nankoku Hidai and Shiryu Morita. Both rejected the ossification of traditional practice, yet their solutions diverged sharply. Hidai pursued abstraction with singular intensity, stripping away textuality entirely in works like his landmark 1945 "Spirit Line 1: Lightning-Variation," which scandalized the establishment by questioning whether calligraphy could exist without characters.
