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Posts Tagged ‘Calligraphy Writing’

 

Calligraphy: The art of beautiful writing

Thursday, October 1st, 2009
Glentertainment asked:


Calligraphic writing is uniform in style and has proportionately constructed letters and accurately spaced letters and words. The name derives from the Greek kailos meaning beauty, and graphein to write.

Fine penmanship has been distinguished from functional writing since ancient times. In ancient Greece professional scribes copied important civil, literary, and religious texts in elegant scripts. In many Oriental countries, particularly China and Japan, calligraphy is regarded as the greatest of the visual arts and considered an art form that is superior to painting.

In Europe during the 4th and 5th centuries books were written in square capitals (’majuscules’) derived from classical Roman inscriptions (Trajan’s Column in Rome is the outstanding example). The rustic capitals of the same period were written more freely, the pen being held at a severe angle so that the scribe was less frequently inclined to change the angle for special flourishes. Uncial capitals, more rounded, were used from the 4th to the 8th centuries. During this period the cursive hand was also developing, and the interplay of this with the formal hands, coupled with the need for speedier writing, led to the small letter forms (’minuscules’).

During the 7th century the half-uncial was developed with ascending and descending strokes and was adopted by all countries under Roman rule. The cursive forms developed differently in different countries. In Italy the italic script was evolved and became the model for italic typefaces. Printing and the typewriter reduced the need for calligraphy in the West.

During the Middle Ages calligraphy was a highly specialized technique practiced by monks and professional scribes. Medieval calligraphers developed a complicated Gothic, or black letter, script. This heavy, angular writing, although it was imprecise and difficult to read, became the accepted book hand throughout Europe and was copied by the first printers. There are outstanding examples of Gothic script in medieval illuminated manuscripts.

The profession of calligraphy reached its peak in Renaissance Italy. Renaissance scholars, however, found the intricacies of Gothic script inappropriate for the transcription of classical texts. They devised a less complicated style based on the earlier Caroline script developed during Charlemagne’s reign. The Renaissance script, known as neo-Caroline, or humanistic, was the forerunner of modern handwriting.

With the invention of the printing press and the increase in literacy in the 15th century, formal literary calligraphy declined. A more casual, flowing script was developed for use in business correspondence and in daily life. In 1522, Lodovico Arrighi wrote the first writing manual for non-professional scribes.

By the 17th century, calligraphy as a fine art and profession had virtually disappeared.

In 19th-century England, William Morris and Owen Jones tried unsuccessfully to revive interest in fine handwriting.

The modern interest in calligraphy is mainly the result of the work of Edward Johnston (1872-1944), a teacher at the Central School of Arts and Crafts in London, who wrote the outstanding modern text on calligraphy, Writing and Illuminating and Lettering (1906), which became the foundation of modern calligraphy. Johnston there showed that the best medieval alphabets could be reproduced through the correct use of traditional tools, especially the edged pen, and adapted for modern purposes.

The present letter forms have gradually evolved from originals shaped by the tools used to make them — the flat brush on paper, the chisel on stone, the stylus on wax and clay, and the reed and quill on papyrus and skin.

Techniques of applying burnished gold were revived largely through the experiments of Graily Hewitt (1864-1952). In 1921, a group of Johnston’s and Hewitt’s pupils founded the Society of Scribes and Illuminators (SSI). The continuing influence of the SSI, with its professional and ‘lay’ members, has spread from England to the Continent and the United States.



Geraldine

 

How To Start A Home Based Calligraphy Business

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009
David Gass asked:


Calligraphy is beautiful writing. It is a delightful art. In some religions, the name of God is written in various forms of calligraphy as a means to convey prayers. Calligraphy can be a fun hobby, a creative art, and even a great home based business. All you will need is a pen and paper and some space to start with. Writing is the basic prerequisite for the calligraphic artist.

You need not be an artist or a painter either. Attention to detail and some patience is all you need. An excellent piece of calligraphy inspires us to strive for excellence and touches the depths of spirituality within us. One can see the picture of the Divine in the artistic lines.

Your own Calligraphy Business

Calligraphy is an acquired art. A person with basic artistic ability can learn this special art. Many stores get orders for specialized hand letter printing which only a calligrapher can perform. Wedding announcements, address writing on cards, menus, invitations, personalized greeting cards, and certificates need to be hand written. If the order is small, commercial printing is expensive. People often prefer calligraphic type to make the card attractive.

Even if a photocopier is used to make duplicate copies, the original will still need the calligraphy. A good calligrapher can work as an in-house calligrapher with printers or a stationary store. You can also do freelance for many such organizations.

Learning Calligraphy

There are many self-help books and kits available at inexpensive prices from bookstores to teach and learn calligraphy.

A calligraphy teacher will help you in learning to use broad tipped pens to make wide vertical strokes and narrow horizontal lines. Turning the pen results in various effects, like wider, rounder or pin pointed shapes.

You can learn to master one alphabet at a time for ornate embellishment and variations in writing them. The simple alphabets transform magically into amazing artistic shapes. The words thus formed come to a strange life of their own. This is the power of the practiced and perfected art of calligraphy.

How to Start

Learn calligraphy through a kit or under a tutor. Practice until you attain perfection. Personally, call on stationery shops or printers to tell them of your talent. Leave your self-designed cards, with an idea of cost and samples of your best work. For card printing, first print your design and logo and then get it reduced to business card size, two by three and a half inches. This will give a sharp and clear look to your business card. Get multiples made with the help of an inexpensive photo offset process and finally get them embossed for expensive looks.

Make samples of cards, menus, and certificates with calligraphy and give them as samples to potential customers. This leads to impulsive purchases.

Calligraphy can be a hobby or a lucrative business venture with practically no overheads.



Phyllis

 

What is a good subtopic to write about on chinese calligraphy/art?

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009
Tania E asked:


I’m writing an essay about chinese calligraphy/art. So far, my subtopics are: chinese calligraphy, chinese painting, seals, and the materials used. what is another subtopic I can write about?

June

 

How do people get trained to write chinese calligraphy?

Thursday, February 12th, 2009
Tania E asked:


i’m writing an essay about chinese calligraphy/art. how do the people get trained? how long does it take them?? any websites you recommend to go to??

Roberta

 

Art by Calligraphy Experts

Sunday, January 11th, 2009
Jimmy asked:


It implies with sure knowledge in the correct form of letters that it is, the conventional signs through that language could be communicated, so the skill is inscribed with such ordering in various parts or harmony of proportions with the cultivation and knowing eye will recognize the compositions as a work of art by Calligraphy Experts.

In Eastern part of Asia, Calligraphy with exacting and long tradition is considered as significant art, with equal priority of painting. In Western culture the simpler Greek or Latin-derived Alphabets with the spread of literacy tend to make ‘Handwriting’ theoretically although by few instances, especially since either aspired to or attained the status of Calligraphy Art.

In the Ming Period, Calligraphy continued to thrive, especially in the time of 16 and 17 th centuries, and with new art-developments likes of the appearance calligraphic hanging scrolls and testified with increasing popularity of writing as a decorative art form. “Tung Chi Chang”, in calligraphy painting came to be regarded as master for its time paired with painting and moved in the direction of greater linear expressiveness; in calligraphy the change came increasingly under the sway of developments, not just in technique but with style in aesthetic theory. In the nortern are the Sanitization of the ruler by Turkic in ‘Wei’ for the late Fifth century and the Chinese reunification paved under the ‘Sui’ and Tang.

Calligraphy, the fine art of writing has often been occupied the grater place among all he visual arts in country of China. For the direct ancestor of modern envelope address writing, the script used on Oracle shells or bones of the middle; it gradually evolved with the large seal script or late dynasty, it had already developed that into a complex and semi-pictorial system.Since the 2 nd or 3 rd AD with the Koreans have used Chinese characters that emerged as art of writing. In 1447 even after the invention of the Korean alphabet, Chinese was used as the official script till now in 19th century. A few inscribed stone monuments remain from the Ancient Koreans, eager to adopt Chinese culture, developed a Calligraphy reflecting China’s styles.

For more info: Art by Calligraphy Experts



Marilyn