Sho Japanese Calligraphy. Christopher J. Earnshaw

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Sho Japanese Calligraphy - Christopher J. Earnshaw

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Sumi Inkstick

       Kami Paper

       Suzuri Inks tone

       Interviews with Famous Calligraphers

       Uno Sesson - Abstract Calligraphy

       Kaneko Ōtei - The Modern Movement

       Chō Yōseki - Carved Calligraphy

       Naruse Eizan - Classical Calligraphy

       An Appraisal of a Work - Sōsōshi

       Appendices

       A few facts about Kanji, Kakijun, characters for daily use, monograms, graphology, Eiji Happō

       Greetings

       The Seasons

       Special Names for a Person’s Age

       A List of City and Country Names

       Rakkanbun and the Sixty Year Cycle

       Ateji

       Kekkōhō

       Hiragana, Katakana and Hentaigana

       The Roots of Kanji

       Some Notes on the Poetry of China and Japan

       A List of Chinese and Japanese Poems

       The Iroha Poem

       Source List and Bibliography

       Glossary

      A Foreword

      Working the inkstick slowly backwards and forwards on the inkstone, I study what I am going to write. My eyes drink in the slender lines, the power, the rhythm, and the vitality there. Already in my mind’s eye an invisible brush is forming the characters on the untouched paper.

      Facing the paper and reaching for the brush I experience a calm, relaxed feeling. My whole being is concentrated on the small square of paper and as I contemplate the possibilities of form, balance and rhythm open to me, the paper seems to grow in size. I write one copy and then another and soon the brush has become an extension of my inner self. The brush translates into black and white through the simple medium of a line, a form many artists cannot express even with a rainbow of colours on their palette. Being totally engrossed in the potential and the problems of constructing the character, the sensation of time just slips away. I write thirty or forty copies and my subconscious quietly ascends a crescendo of excitement as I near the goal. Finally I have it. A copy that is perfect in form and bursting with energy. Each tittle I look at it I see that my feelings of the moment have been put down on paper for eternity. This feeling communicates itself not only to me but to others as well. The better the writing, the more understandable my expression.

      This passage may seem very difficult to comprehend now, but the more you practice the more vivid its meaning will become. In this book I intend to introduce the reader to the method and show the way to a full appreciation of calligraphy in its many forms, both Japanese and Chinese. I expect that he will in the end be able to create meaningful works of art himself. Calligraphy is very rewarding not just on an artistic level, but also in a spiritual sense. Many of those who have had experience in Zen meditation, myself included, confirm the analogy. Indeed many of the most famous practitioners during calligraphy’s 3,500 year history, have been priests.

      Calligraphy, a major art encountered every day in the Far East, has been largely overlooked by western visitors in search of Asian culture. Calligraphy is not merely the exercise in good handwriting that many people believe it to be, but rather the foremost art form of the Orient. The Tea Ceremony Sadō and Flower Arranging Kadō are, being quite accessible to outsiders, the best known. The object of the Tea Ceremony is in the experience of a moment and that of Flower Arranging in creating a work that lasts a few days, but in calligraphy shodō, the peak of the moment and the enduring pleasure of days are combined.

      Let me now guide your brush from the simplest examples to a place where you can write with fluency and confidence. First though you must learn the fundamentals and then you can venture on with your own creations.

Image

      The Beauty of

       Japanese Calligraphy

      There is no riddle to calligraphy; It is simply a formula which combines the skill and imagination of a person who has studied intensely the combinations available to him with only lines. His is but to build wonderful structures without hesitation, mistake or variation with those simple lines. The pure power and rhythms of nature influence the artist and he interprets this to infuse his characters with “life”.

      Good calligraphy is instantly discernable from bad to the trained eye, but as beauty is not an absolute quality, it is very difficult to demonstrate why this is so. Nevertheless here are a few guidelines to help explain:

      a) There is a natural balance in both the characters and the composition as a whole.

      b) There is an abstract beauty in the line which may be subdivided and evaluated thus:

      1) Straight lines are strong, solid and clear.

      2) Curved lines are delicate, feminine and mobile.

      3) There is a variance in the thickness and thinness of the lines.

      4) The amount of ink on the brush or the lack of it (cf. kasure) is consistent throughout the work.

      5) The size of the characters are of a scale which give a pulse to the work.

      6) The colour of the ink, kasure, the pulse and the quality of the lines combine to form rhythm!

      Calligraphy provides a two-fold pleasure to the beholder; an aesthetic visual stimulus as well as an aural excitement. Here, however, we will concern ourselves with only the visual aspect. As a single stroke may not be touched up or rewritten, any lack of talent is immediately apparent. If any one of the above points is missing, it is as glaring as discord in a Bach concerto. This perfect coordination between hand and mind takes years of practice. For all that however, legibility, or as we think of it neatness, is not a controlling factor.

      Many people think of calligraphy in terms of dancing, but I prefer to think that classical music, being stricter, is a more apt comparison. A pianist achieves success or not as the case may be, through his interpretation of the myriad notes of a piece of music. A poem lies beside the calligrapher like a piece of music. Likewise his success depends upon the appeal in its presentation.

      The pianist peers at signs beneath the notes telling him to crash loudly, tinkle softly or race ahead. In the same way the calligrapher receives clues in the meaning of the words. Both the musical piece and the

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