Chinese calligraphy (Shufa)
Calligraphy
is understood in China as the art of writing a good hand with the brush
or the study of the rules and techniques of this art.
As such it is peculiar to China and the few countries influenced by
ancient Chinese culture.
In the history of Chinese art, calligraphy has always
been held in equal importance to painting. Great attention is also paid
today to its development by holding exhibitions of ancient and
contemporary works and by organizing competitions among youngsters
and people from various walks of life. Sharing of experience in this
field often makes a feature in Sino-Japanese cultural exchange.
Chinese calligraphy, like the script itself, began
with the hieroglyphs and, over the long ages of evolution, has developed
various styles and schools, constituting an important part of the heritage
of national culture.
Chinese scripts are generally divided into five categories:
the seal character (zhuan), the official or
clerical script (li), the regular script (kai),
the running hand (xing) and the cursive hand
(cao).
1) The Zhuan script or seal character
was the earliest form of writing after the oracle inscriptions,
which must have caused great inconvenience because they lacked uniformity
and many characters were written in variant forms. The first effort
for the unification of writing, it is said, took place during the reign
of King Xuan (827-782 B.C.) of the Western Zhou Dynasty,
when his taishi (grand historian) Shi Zhou compiled a lexicon of 15
chapters, standardizing Chinese writing under script
called zhuan. It is also known as zhouwen after the name of the author.
This script, often used in seals, is translated into English as the
seal character, or as the "curly script"
after the shape of its strokes.
Shi Zhou's lexicon (which some thought was written
by a later author of the state of Qin) had long been lost, yet it is
generally agreed that the inscriptions on the drum-shaped Qin stone
blocks were basically of the same style as the old zhuan script.
When, in 221 B.C., Emperior Qin Shi Huang unified
the whole of China under one central government, he ordered his Prime
Minister Li Si to collect and sort out all the different
systems of writing hitherto prevalent in different parts of the country
in a great effort to unify the written language under one system. What
Li did, in effect, was to simplify the ancient zhuan (small
seal) script.
Today we have a most valuable relic of this ancient writing
in the creator Li Si's own hand engraved on a stele standing in the
Temple to the God of Taishan Mountain in Shandong Province.
The 2,200-year-old stele, worn by age and weather, has only nine and
a half characters left on it.
2) The lishu (official script) came
in the wake of the xiaozhuan in the same short-lived Qin Dynasty(221-206B.C.).
This was because the xiaozhuan, though a simplified
form of script, was still too complicated for the scribers
in the various government offices who had to copy an increasing amount
of documents. Cheng Miao, a prison warden, made a further simplification
of the xiaozhuan, changing the curly strokes into straight
and angular ones and thus making writing much easier. A further step
away from the pictographs, it was named lishu because
li in classical Chinese meant "clerk" or "scriber".
Another version says that Cheng Miao, because of certain offence, became
a prisoner and slave himself; as the ancients also called bound slaves
"li", so the script was named lishu or the
"script of a slave".
3) The lishu was already very close to, and led to the adoption of,
kaishu, regular script. The oldest
existing example of this dates from the Wei (220-265), and the script
developed under the Jin (265-420).The standard writing today is square
in form, non-cursive and architectural in style.The
characters are composed of a number of strokes out of a total of eight
kinds-the dot, the horizontal, the
vertical, the hook, the rising,
the left-falling (short and long) and the right-falling
strokes. Any aspirant for the status of calligrapher must start
by learning to write a good hand in kaishu.
4) On the basis of lishu also evolved caoshu (grass
writing or cursive hand), which is rapid and
used for making quick but rough copies. This style is subdivided into
two schools: zhangcao and jincao.
The first of these emerged at the time the Qin was replaced by the
Han Dynasty between the 3rd and 2nd centuries B.C. The characters,
though written rapidly, still stand separate one from another and the
dots are not linked up with other strokes.
Jincao or the moderm cursive hand
is said to have been developed by Zhang Zhi(?-c.192 A.D.) of the Eastern
Han Dynasty, flourished in the Jin and Tang dynasties
and is still widely popular today.
It is the essence of the caoshu, especially jincao,
that the characters are executed swiftly with the strokes running together.
The characters are often joined up, with the last stroke of the first
merging into the initial stroke of the next. They also vary in size
in the same piece of writing, all seemingly dictated by the whims of
the writer.
A
great master at caoshu was Zhang Xu(early
8th century) of the Tang Dynasty, noted for the complete abandon with
which he applied the brush. It is said that he would not set about writing
until he had got drunk. This he did, allowing the brush to "gallop"
across the paper, curling, twisting or meandering in one unbroken stroke,
thus creating an original style. Today one may still see fragments of
a stele carved with characters in his handwriting, kept in the Provincial
Museum of Shaanxi.
5) The xingshu or running hand is
something between the regular and the cursive scripts.
When carefully written with distinguishable strokes, the xingshu
characters will be very close to the regular style; when swiftly
executed, they will approach the caoshu or cursive
hand. Chinese masters have always compared
with vivid aptness the three styles of writing-kaishu, xingshu and caoshu-to
people standing, walking and running.
The best example and model for xingshu, all Chinese calligraphers
will agree, is the Inscription on Lanting Pavilion
in the hand of Wang Xizhi (321-379) of the Eastern
Jin Dynasty.
To learn to write a nice hand in Chinese calligraphy,
assiduous and persevering practice is necessary. This has been borne
out by the many great masters China has produced. Wang Xizhi,
the great artist just mentioned, who has exerted a profound influence
on, and has been held in high esteem by, calligraphers and scholars
throughout history, is said to have blackened in his childhood all the
water of a pond in front of his house by washing the writing implements
in it after his daily exercises. Another master. Monk Zhiyong
of the Sui Dynasty (581-618) was so industrious in
learning calligraphy that he filled many jars with worn-out writing
brushes, which he buried in a "tomb of brushes".
Renewed interest in brush-writing has been kindled today among the
pupils in China, some of whom already show promises as worthy successors
to the ancient masters.
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