Javascript must be enabled to continue!
An Aesthetics of Chinese Calligraphy
View through CrossRef
AbstractThis article introduces the aesthetic significance of Chinese calligraphy, one of the highest art forms in China. It focuses on three major aesthetic concerns manifested in classical texts on this art. First, Chinese art theory stresses that the forms (xing) of successful calligraphic works are never static; rather, they should be filled with internal force (shi). Second, calligraphic creation can be understood as a psychosomatic process, that is, involving coordination between the mind and the hand. Third, appreciation of Chinese calligraphy is identified with the process of reconstructing the calligrapher's creation of the work, which is analogous to Richard Wollheim's identifying criticism as retrieval. The last section examines the concept of qi and discusses what kind of aesthetic considerations encourage us to make a connection between Chinese calligraphy and abstract art.
Title: An Aesthetics of Chinese Calligraphy
Description:
AbstractThis article introduces the aesthetic significance of Chinese calligraphy, one of the highest art forms in China.
It focuses on three major aesthetic concerns manifested in classical texts on this art.
First, Chinese art theory stresses that the forms (xing) of successful calligraphic works are never static; rather, they should be filled with internal force (shi).
Second, calligraphic creation can be understood as a psychosomatic process, that is, involving coordination between the mind and the hand.
Third, appreciation of Chinese calligraphy is identified with the process of reconstructing the calligrapher's creation of the work, which is analogous to Richard Wollheim's identifying criticism as retrieval.
The last section examines the concept of qi and discusses what kind of aesthetic considerations encourage us to make a connection between Chinese calligraphy and abstract art.
Related Results
Being a Disciple of the Past: The Tradition and Creativity in Chinese Calligraphy Criticism
Being a Disciple of the Past: The Tradition and Creativity in Chinese Calligraphy Criticism
Abstract
This article starts with a discussion of the role of tradition as it is related to creativity or originality in Western art theory and literary criticism be...
Dostoevsky’s Calligraphy: Problems of Study
Dostoevsky’s Calligraphy: Problems of Study
The article is devoted to the problems of studying Dostoevsky’s calligraphy. The first paragraph discusses the historical and theoretical aspects of handwriting studies, as well as...
A Disintegrating Lyric? – Henri Michaux and Chinese Lyricism
A Disintegrating Lyric? – Henri Michaux and Chinese Lyricism
This essay examines the perplexing triangular relation between Henri Michaux's ambiguous and attenuated lyricism, the French lyrical tradition, and Michaux's Chinese-inspired poems...
Chinese Opera in Turn-of-the Century Canada: Local History and Transnational Circulation
Chinese Opera in Turn-of-the Century Canada: Local History and Transnational Circulation
One of the most curious aspects about Canadian Chinese cultural history is the role of opera theatres. They served as the public face of the community, cultural ambassadors or even...
Cambodia’s Policy towards the Cambodia-Chinese since wwii
Cambodia’s Policy towards the Cambodia-Chinese since wwii
Abstract
Although anti-Chinese riots are rare in Cambodia, the ethnic Chinese in Cambodia during the Khmer Rouge era experienced some of the most severe repression in the world. Th...
Vancouver Chinatown in Transition
Vancouver Chinatown in Transition
AbstractMuch has been written about Chinatowns in North America as a self-sustained community with fairly complete social institutions. Chinatowns emerged under an era of racism an...
Existential aesthetics
Existential aesthetics
Abstract
The aim of what I propose to call “existential aesthetics” is to investigate the various ways in which art and certain kinds of aesthetic practice or aesthe...
Thoughts on Modernism and “Feminist Aesthetics of Potentiality” In Ziarek’s Feminist Aesthetics and the Politics of Modernism
Thoughts on Modernism and “Feminist Aesthetics of Potentiality” In Ziarek’s Feminist Aesthetics and the Politics of Modernism
This brief review essay focuses on the central question posed in Ewa Plonowska Ziarek’s Feminist Aesthetics and the Politics of Modernism: if feminism is considered in social and b...