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Published byMelissa Craig Modified over 9 years ago
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The History of Chinese Calligraphy Chuan Cao - 6/20/2015 Slide Part 1
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Introduction Relationship between Chinese calligraphy and painting. Poem, calligraphy, painting, seal. Focus on knowledge and character. Ancient Chinese culture - little emphasis on science. (i.e.: gun powder) Brush control, the use of wrist, etc.
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Different fonts - differences all lie in the starting and ending points. Concealed tip vs explicit tip. Center tip. Etc. Line variation. Chinese Art is deeply rooted in tradition.
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Oracle Bones Official named Wang Yirong was sick with dysentery - 1899. Attendant went to pharmacy to procure medicine. "dragon bone” ingredient Used by “wizards” - Predictions of war, testing “auspices”
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Bronze Script - 金文 The Seal Script ( 篆書 ) is the most archaic script Generally referred to as “Seal Script”, it is in fact many numerous sub-scripts that were each used for different historical purposes. The oldest is “oracle bone script” ( 甲骨文 ) Jin Wen ( 金文 ), or Bronze Script, is far more well-known. This is the script that was used for inscribing ceremonial Bronze vessels in the Zhou Dynasty. Shi Gu Wen ( 石鼓文 /Shih Ku Wen), the Stone and Drum Script was used for monumental stone inscriptions, and both it and Jin Wen were never standardized; Jin Wen and Shi Gu Wen are often simply called Da Zhuan ( 大篆 ), or Large Seal Script.
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The Seal Script most used for Calligraphy is based on the first standardized Chinese script: Qin Zhuan ( 秦 篆 )Qin Seal Script.. The name of this script is taken from the Qin Dynasty that ushered in the dynastic epoch of a unified Middle Kingdom.
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Types of Bronze 簋 vessel for holding cooked food 盘 plate 鼎 tripod - cooking vessel
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The shift from Seal Script to Clerical Script Was it a gradual shift, or did everything happen concurrently? Practicality Ease of writing
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