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Chinese Calligraphy, a Live Chinese Antique

 
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artstates



Joined: 06 Aug 2008
Posts: 4
Location: Beijing, China

PostPosted: Wed Aug 06, 2008 1:50 am    Post subject: Chinese Calligraphy, a Live Chinese Antique Reply with quote

The history of Chinese calligraphy is as long as that of China itself. Calligraphy is a special category in China's world of fine arts and one of the most challenging Chinese art forms for a foreigner to appreciate or master. Calligraphy, orshufa, is one of the four basic skills and disciplines of the Chinese literati, together with painting (hua), stringed musical instruments (qin) and board games (qi).

Classification

Studying Chinese calligraphy one must learn something about the origins of Chinese characters, which can be traced to inscriptions on bones, tortoise shells and bronzeware of which the earliest identifiable characters belonged to the Shang Dynasty (16th-11th century BC).

Through the centuries Chinese characters have changed constantly and are mainly divided into five categories today: the seal script (zhuan shu), official script (li shu), regular script (kai shu), running script (xing shu) and cursive script (cao shu). Chinese calligraphy, like script itself, has developed the above-mentioned styles according to various schools.

Seal characters, which were developed in the Western Zhou Dynasty (11th century-711BC) and are the earliest form of writing after oracle inscriptions, were the first unified and standardized characters of the nation. Official script is a simplified form of script since seal characters were too complicated for ancient officials to use when copying documents. Official script led to the emergence of regular script, which was square in form, non-cursive and architectural in style, in the third century. Official script also gave birth to cursive script where characters are often joined with the last stroke of the first that merges into the initial stroke of the next character, which made the writing process much faster. Running script falls somewhere between regular and cursive scripts.

Calligraphy is an art form that involves a great deal of theory and requires many skills; consequently there are few calligraphers that have reached the highest realm of calligraphy. Among the most outstanding calligraphers in ancient China were Wang Xizhi, Ouyang Xun, Yan Zhengqing, and Liu Gongquan, who are known for pioneering their own styles.

Four Treasures of the Study

To produce Chinese characters one will need a brush, paper, ink stick and ink stone, commonly referred to as the "Four Treasures of the Study". To learn calligraphy, it is necessary to learn about these tools.

While brushes are varied, white-goat-hair, black-rabbit-hair and yellow-weasel-hair brushes are the main ones. On the basis of function, brushes are classified into three groups: hard, soft and both. Brush handles are usually made of bamboo, wood, lacquer or porcelain; ivory or jade handles are rare and precious.



The ink stick is a unique pigment used for Chinese traditional painting and calligraphy. The most famous ink stick ishui mo(Anhui ink stick), made of pines that grow on Huangshan Mountain in Anhui Province. Clean water is needed to grind the ink stick, which must be balanced in the hand during the grinding or rubbing process. Press hard and rub lightly, slowly and evenly against the ink slab until a thick, liquid-ink forms.



Paper was invented by Cai Lun in the Eastern Han Dynasty (25-220). While paper comes in many varieties, Xuan paper, produced in the Jing Prefecture of Xuanzhou (today's Anhui Province), is considered the best for Chinese calligraphy. The paper is soft and fine textured, suitable for conveying the artistic expression of both Chinese calligraphy and painting. With a good tensile strength and mothproof quality, the paper can be preserved for a long time.
Ink stones or ink slabs have been classified into three categories:Duan,SheandTao. Features common to all three ink slabs are the stone's hardness and fineness. Although the stone is hard and fine, it is not dry or slippery. Using a hard, smooth stone, liquid ink can be produced easily by rubbing the ink stick against the stone.

By controlling the flexibility of the brush, the concentration of the ink and the absorbency of the paper, the artist can produce an infinite variety of calligraphic styles and forms.

Calligraphy: Leader of All Art Forms

Few nations in the world have calligraphy as a form of art. In China, calligraphy has maintained a close rapport with the country's cultural development.

Calligraphy is an expressive art. According to an old Chinese saying, "the way characters are written is a portrait of the person who writes them." Expressing the abstract beauty of lines and rhythms, calligraphy is a reflection of a person's emotions, moral integrity, character, educational level, accomplishments in self-cultivation, intellectual tastes and approach to life. Chinese characters, which convey ideas, are regarded as the most abstract and sublime art form.

Calligraphy is also a practical fine art. Exotic calligraphic inscriptions written on paper, wooden plaques or stone tablets serve as decorations of a deep artistic value.

Calligraphy manifests the basic characteristics of all Chinese arts. Closely associated with paintings -- the two leaders of Chinese art forms -- calligraphy takes precedence over painting since it greatly inspired the art of painting. Moreover, calligraphy has influenced other typically Chinese art forms like classical poetry, seal-cutting, sculpture, traditional music and dance, architecture and handicrafts.

Calligraphy is a mental exercise that coordinates the mind and body. It is a most relaxing yet highly disciplined exercise for physical and spiritual well-being. Historically, many calligraphic artists lived to a ripe, old age.

An Art of the Orient

Chinese calligraphy is an Oriental art. Like chopsticks, calligraphy was once entirely Chinese, but as Chinese culture spread to Korea, Japan, and Singapore, calligraphy became a unique feature of the Oriental art.

Calligraphy is even wildly accepted by the West; as once Picasso said, "Had I been born Chinese, I would have been a calligrapher, not a painter." Many calligraphic elements are being adopted by modern western art.

Article quoted from: www.artstates.com
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Vicbowling



Joined: 24 Mar 2010
Posts: 1

PostPosted: Wed Mar 24, 2010 8:34 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thank you for the interesting history of Chinese Calligraphy! I've been trying to learn how to do this myself and I'm wondering if anyone knows where I can get quality sized xuan paper online? I've tried getting a chinese crafts supply company to locate some for me but they're taking forever to get back to me and I want to practice Chinese brush painting on a higher quality paper than I can get locally. I don't see much point in using cheap paper because when I finally find the nicer paper I will just have to get used to using that (re-learning the feel of the ink on the paper). I need a company that ships to North America and can do that without much trouble. Thank you for your help if you know the answer to this.
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chinapage
Site Admin


Joined: 03 Jun 2002
Posts: 3548
Location: New Jersey, U.S.

PostPosted: Fri Mar 26, 2010 3:28 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Vic:
Glad to hear that you are taking up calligraphy. I am sure
you will not regret it.

It is not necessary to begin with good paper like yuan paper.
I rather think that all Chinese students begin with ordinary
writing paper. Switching to a better paper can never a problem
at some later stage. More important to acquire a good grade
of calligraphic writing brush.

You can try with good quality paper napkins, which have
about the same water-absorbing characteristics.

Ming
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sllee



Joined: 10 Jul 2002
Posts: 731
Location: USA

PostPosted: Tue Mar 30, 2010 4:41 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

acornplanet.com is located in Long Island. They have good quality products for writing Chinese calligraphy. They owner is from the area that produces all the equipment. I have made some purchases from her. Very reasonable.

By the way the website quoted by the other poster is non-functional. It copied some of the materials on my website:

http://www.asiawind.com/art/callig
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sunan



Joined: 10 May 2010
Posts: 2

PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 6:45 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I like Chinese calligraphy, very heritage. Cool
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