The Koi, Swimming Against the Current

The Koi and the Japanese Spirit

Facing hardship, overcoming it, and carving one’s own path through sheer effort — people have long seen their own way of life reflected in the figure of the carp.

According to the tale, thousands of koi swim upstream in a powerful river. The journey is long and exhausting. The current pushes them backward. Rocks cut their bodies. Many turn around. Only a few continue.

At the top of the river is a massive waterfall known as the Dragon Gate. It is said that any koi strong enough to leap over it will transform into a dragon.

Most fail. But the ones that persist — not the fastest, not the biggest, but the most determined — eventually clear the waterfall. In doing so, they transform. The dragon represents achievement, elevation, and fulfillment of potential.

Significance

“Movement” Woven into the Kinran

In this fabric, carp are woven using gold and silver threads.

Each time the light catches it, the scales seem to ripple, the flow of water comes alive, and the carp’s expression shifts as if it were swimming in that very moment.

Not a painting, but “a will in motion,” expressed through thread.