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The Simple Art of Japanese Calligraphy: A Step-by-step Guide to Creating Japanese Characters

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title The Simple Art of Japanese Calligraphy: A Step-by-step Guide to Creating Japanese Characters
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Yoko Takenami
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:128
Dimensions(mm): Height 276,Width 208
Category/GenreLettering and calligraphy
ISBN/Barcode 9781906525446
ClassificationsDewey:745.610952
Audience
General
Illustrations 200 colour illustrations

Publishing Details

Publisher Ryland, Peters & Small Ltd
Imprint CICO Books
Publication Date 1 April 2009
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

NEW IN PAPERBACK Developed since the sixth century, practised by the royal elite and Buddhist scholars, and packed with spiritual meaning, Japanese calligraphy has its own style; simple, elegant and gentle. Starting with a history section that illuminates the thousands of years of calligraphy with inspiring examples, the core of the book is a clear step-by-step guide to creating stunning calligraphy. The 15 projects, from a greetings card to painting calligraphy motifs on river pebbles and linen hangings, represent authentic uses of Japanese scripts.The combination of simple stokes and meaningful characters that makes up each of these unique projects means you can create artworks that will give you and your loved ones truly enduring results. A clear materials section shows you exactly what you need to start, while the comprehensive techniques chapter demonstrates how to hold the brush, create characters and write pieces. Also included are 100 of the most popular Western first names, plus a series of greetings, sentiments and poems, including haikus and Zen proverbs, so you can personalize your projects.

Author Biography

Yoko Takenami started her calligraphy studies at the age of six. Educated in Japan and in Ohio, US, she qualified as a master of calligraphy in 1990. Yoko now lives in London and teaches calligraphy at the School of Oriental and African Studies while also working as a TV broadcasting interpreter. She regularly returns to Japan for inspiration for her calligraphy and tuition from her Teshinkai Master. Yoko has demonstrated calligraphy for the UK TV programme New Millenium.

Reviews

Mar 09 The title of this book offers a huge hostage to fortune, for Japanese calligraphy is anything but simple and to suggest that it might be is to reduce it pretty much out of existence. This is intended to be a project-based craft book of the kind that offers simple and colourful demonstrations that the beginner can easily follow and which presents a result which is sufficiently seductive that the reader will always feel they have a chance of emulating, however tentative their initial steps. There are plenty of books such as this and their continued appearance indicates a popularity that suggests that the approach works, so we shouldn't damn them with accusations of triviality. The problem that this book has, however, is that, as well as showing some very attractive ideas, it also needs to go at some length into the formation of actual characters in several different scripts and this takes up a third of its length. Already, we're into a more specialist area and, while I can see the value of being able to write Happy Birthday or Happy Halloween correctly, some of the details of the order of brushstrokes and the characters for unexplained voiced sounds seem just a little more than is necessary in a book essentially aimed at the beginner or, dare I say it?, the dilettante. There's no getting away from the fact that any calligraphic letter-form book is always going to look worthy and unexciting and this aspect seems to jar with the colourful and imaginative projects that occupy the last half of the book are which are the reason, I rather think, that you might consider buying it. None of this might matter if the book had had a title which suggested that it was more than something for the beginner, but then I'd be complaining that it wasn't comprehensive enough. No, it can't win, but I think that's more the fault of the format that it is mine for being picky. Artbookreview.net