Chinese_calligraphy Chinese_calligraphy

Chinese calligraphy - Definition and Overview

Related Words: Artist, Ceramics, Decoration, Design, Designing, Engraving, Etching, Fist, Graphology

East Asian calligraphy typically uses ink brushes to write Chinese characters (called Hanzi in Chinese, Kanji in Japanese, and Hanja in Korean). Calligraphy (in Chinese, Shufa 書法, in Japanese Shodō 書道, or "the way of writing") is considered an important art in East Asia and the most refined form of East Asian painting.

Calligraphy has influenced most major art styles in East Asia, including sumi-e, a style of Chinese and Japanese painting based entirely on calligraphy.

Chinese characters written in three styles, from top to bottom: kaisho/kaishu, gyōsho/xingshu, sōsho/caoshu.
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Chinese characters written in three styles, from top to bottom: kaisho/kaishu, gyōsho/xingshu, sōsho/caoshu.
The main categories of Chinese-character calligraphy
English name Hanzi(Pinyin) Rōmaji
Seal script 篆書(Zhuànshū) Tensho
Clerical script (Official script) 隸書
(隷書)(Lìshū)
Reisho
Regular Script (Block script) 楷書(Kǎishū) Kaisho
Running script (Semi-cursive Script) 行書(Xíngshū) Gyōsho
Grass script (Cursive script) 草書(Cǎoshū) Sōsho

For regular script characters, the character basically fits into a square space, with each character of roughly the same size and proportion. Learners of Chinese characters are likely to encounter this form first, and in learning to write Chinese characters the form enables the student to appreciate the proportions of each part of the character as well as each character stroke. Though brushpen has been used for over two thousand years, today, most students begin with pencil or pens, and the calligraphy of modern handwriting is also a challenge to read for those with expressive running hand script.

Grass script is notorious for its economy of individual penstrokes. Quite often different characters written in the regular script form may resemble each other when written in grass script.

The clerical script is highly stylised, a development from seal script form. They are highly angular in appearance, and as a precursor to regular script, for modern readers of Chinese characters, they are highly legible, compared to grass script, or seal script.

Seal scripts are regularised scripts, which are noted for the uniformity of thickness and space of vertical, horizontal and curved lines. By its very name, the main use are found on seals or chops. Seal carving is one branch of Chinese calligraphy, and considered as a high art, since it expresses the carver's calligraphy and artistic expression in fitting a number of characters (the majority of which are of seal script form) into such a small area of space, and carved in reverse so that the imprint obtained gives the characters in their proper form. Moreover, due to the nature of the size of seals and lack of space, the development of Chinese characters have been affected by seal carving, since simplification of characters has often been practiced.

Chinese Calligraphers

Japanese Calligraphers

See also


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