In 1997,
visual poets Tim Gaze and Jim Leftwich first applied the word
asemic to name their quasi-calligraphic writing gestures. The authors explored sub-verbal and sub-letteral forms of writing, and textual
asemia as a creative option and as an intentional practice. Since the late 1990s, asemic writing has blossomed into a worldwide literary/
art movement. Its popularity has especially grown in the early part of the 21st century, though there is an acknowledgement of a long and complex history, which precedes the activities of the current asemic movement, especially with regard to abstract calligraphy, wordless writing, and verbal writing damaged beyond the point of legibility. Jim Leftwich has recently stated that an asemic condition of an asemic work is an impossible goal, and that it is not possible to create an literary work entirely without meaning. Others such as author
Travis Jeppesen have found the term
asemic to be problematic because "it seems to infer writing with no meaning." Asemic writing occurs in
avant-garde literature and art with strong roots in the
earliest forms of writing. The history of today's asemic movement stems from two Chinese calligraphers: "crazy"
Zhang Xu, a
Tang dynasty () calligrapher who was famous for creating wild illegible calligraphy, and the younger "drunk" monk
Huaisu who also excelled at illegible
cursive calligraphy. Japanese calligraphers subsequently expanded upon Chinese abstract calligraphic expression by
Hitsuzendō (the way of
Zen through brush), allowing their works to move past formal presentation and "breathe with the vitality of eternal experience". In the 1920s,
Man Ray, who was influenced by
Dada, created an early work of wordless writing with his poem
Paris, 1924. Later in the 1920s,
Henri Michaux, who was influenced by Asian calligraphy,
Surrealism, and
Automatic writing, began to create wordless works such as
Alphabet (1925) and
Narration (1927). Michaux referred to his calligraphic works as "interior Gestures". The writer and artist
Wassily Kandinsky was an early precursor to asemic writing, with his linear piece
Indian Story (1931) exemplifying complete textual abstraction. In the 1950s, there is
Brion Gysin (whose calligraphy was influenced by Japanese and
Arabic calligraphy),
Isidore Isou (who founded
Lettrisme/Letterism),
Cy Twombly (a former US Army
Cryptologist), and
Morita Shiryū/
Bokujin-kai Group (Ink Human Society) all of whom expanded writing into illegible, abstract, and wordless visual mark-making; they would help lay the foundation for asemic writers of the future.
Mira Schendel was an artist from Brazil who created many illegible works over the course of her life, for example her piece
Archaic Writing (1964).
Mirtha Dermisache is another writer who had created asemic writing since the 1960s. Dermisache actively said that even though her graphisms have no meaning, they still retained the full rights of an autonomous work.
Angus MacLise was a
musician and poet who also created asemic calligraphic works in the 1960s. 1971 was the year when
Alain Satié released his work which contains asemic writing throughout the entire
collage graphic novel.
León Ferrari was another artist/poet who created many asemic works in the 1960s and 1970s, such as
Escritura (1976). 1974 saw the release of
Max Ernst's work
Maximiliana: The Illegal Practice Of Astronomy: hommage à Dorothea Tanning; this book is a major influence on asemic writers such as Tim Gaze, Michael Jacobson, and
Derek Beaulieu.
Roland Barthes was also involved with asemic writing; he titled his asemic works Contre-écritures.
Irma Blank was another important contributor to asemic writing. A modern example of asemic writing is
Luigi Serafini's
Codex Seraphinianus (1981). Serafini described the script of the
Codex as asemic in a talk at the
Oxford University Society of Bibliophiles held on 8 May 2009. In the 1980s, Chinese artist
Xu Bing created
Tiānshū, or
A Book from the Sky which is a work of books and hanging scrolls on which were printed 4000 hand carved meaningless characters. The 1980s also saw artist
Gu Wenda begin the first of a series of projects centered on the invention of meaningless, false Chinese ideograms, depicted as if they were truly old and traditional. One exhibition of this type was held in
Xi'an in 1986, featuring paintings of fake ideograms on a massive scale. Also in China, during the 1990s, an abstract calligraphy movement known as "Calligraphy-ism" came into existence, a leading proponent of this movement being Luo Qi. Calligraphy-ism is an aesthetic movement that aims to develop calligraphy into an abstract art. The characters do not need to retain their traditional forms or be legible as words. In Vietnam during the 2000s, a calligraphy group called the Zenei Gang of Five appeared. To this group of young artists, "Wordless" means that which cannot be said, that which is both before and beyond the specificity of naming. To be without words is saying nothing and saying everything. Satu Kaikkonen, a contemporary asemic artist/writer from
Finland, had this to say about asemic writing:
Bruce Sterling comments about asemic writing on his
Wired magazine blog
Beyond the Beyond: ==False writing systems==