is the inventor of the Japanese craze Chindà Âgu.
Kawakami studied aeronautical engineering at Tokai University in 1967, but dropped out when he became involved in student protests of the 1970s facing the passing of the Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security between the United States and Japan, or Anpo (å®Âä¿Â<sup></sup>) treaty.
Following his involvement in the various left-wing protests and activism, Kawakami worked as a freelancer for various projects, including as a scriptwriter for the Italian/Japanese childrenâÂÂs show Calimero.
During the early 1990s, he was hired as an editor and contributor for the monthly Japanese magazine Mail Order Life (éÂÂ販çÂÂæ´» Tsà «han Seikatsu<sup></sup>), a shopping catalogue which at the time was catered toward suburban housewives who enjoyed the act of perusing shop inventories, but found traveling to shop in cities too inconvenient.
Whilst working on Mail Order Life, Kawakami took advantage of sparse issues to showcase a variety of objects that he had created in his spare time. Coined Chindà Âgu, the spreads of his inventions were exceedingly popular with his readers, and subsequently found themselves moved to the front of the magazine as a mainstay.
Literally translated, chindà Âgu means unusual (ç chin<sup></sup>) tool (éÂÂå · dà Âgu<sup></sup>), though Kawakami himself has said that a more appropriate translation would be "weird tool". In a similar vein to Rube Goldbergism, Chindà Âgu is the art of creating a product whose usefulness is precluded by its absurdity.
Kawakami held strong views against the concepts of materialism and capitalism, once stating âÂÂI despise materialism and how everything is turned into a commodity,[â¦]âÂÂ, a philosophy which echoed his experiences during his rebellious days as a student. The concept of Chindà Âgu is at its core, an anti-thesis to mass-consumerism with each handcrafted invention being ill-suited for mass-production. The ideas and philosophies of Kawakami would later become fully realized upon the formation of the Chindà Âgu Society.
As a movement in the early 90s, Chindà Âgu garnered a large following. Dan Papia, the lead editor and writer for the Japanese/English magazine Tokyo Journal, introduced the concept of Chindà Âgu to the English-speaking world in his monthly issues, in turn encouraging his readers to send in concepts for Chindà Âgu.
Together, Kawakami and Papia founded the International Chindà Âgu society, and collaborated on a book titled 101 Unuseless Japanese Inventions: The Art of Chindà Âgu in 1995, closely followed by a companion title, 99 More Unuseless Japanese Inventions: The Art of Chindà Âgu in 1997.
Soon after the societyâÂÂs inception, Kawakami and his collaborators laid down a set of ten tenets, which all objects invented under the pretense of Chindà Âgu must follow in order to be considered as such.
The tenets are as follows:
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In more recent times, Kawakami still maintains a presence in the art world, exhibiting Chindà Âgu at the in 2013 and 2014, the Foire D'Automne in 2014, and in an exhibit in the Palais De Tokyo in 2015.
Kawakami holds a firm stance against the digital age of technology, stating "If you look at digital products, they all isolate people and leave them in their own small world, depriving them of the joy of communicating with others,[...] they also make human relationships more shallow and superficial." As such, he has little to no online presence.