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JUST TO HEAR THE PATH IS LESS THAN NOTHING. WALK THE PATH, EXPERIENCE THE PATH! Shodo is the Japanese word for Calligraphy. It means not just penmanship, but the Way or the Path of writing. In China and Japan, Shodo has long been regarded as one of the most important forms of art. Most of the languages of the world use phonetic symbols, but except for the earliest languages there are hardly any that use hieroglyphs, pictographs or ideographs as the basis for written languages. Languages using phonetic symbols need only a relatively few symbols to fulfill their communicative purposes: it is this need for only a few symbols that represents the strength of such systems. However, in China as well as in Japan the written language is based on direct visual representation. At the simplest level of vocabulary, each written word is actually a picture of the object it describes. There are about two hundred of these elemental ideographs for common objects. They are the foundation of the forty thousand and more Chinese and Japanese characters. Until the 20th century, writing in the East was done with a brush dipped in ground ink. With the supple brush, the elegantly complex characters, and the proper frame of mind, every piece of writing becomes an act of profound expression. Oriental Calligraphy is the dynamic execution of lines in a vast range of rhythmic combinations. The infinitely variable balance of the successive strokes, the flow and the tension, the strength and the proportion of each character are the unique product of the form, writer's personality, and the moment. Through Shodo, the language, the eye, and the hand are linked to the deeper sources of consciousness. There are five traditional styles of Shodo, ranging from rigid precision to flowing smoothness. It is essential to have an appreciation of how characters have changed over the centuries. Until characters were introduced into Japan they had undergone many stylistic changes, producing a magnificent variety of possibilities. By the time these characters arrived in Japan around the fifth and sixth centuries all basic form and styles of Chinese characters as they now exist had been "completed". The changes could be divided into five historical stages as follows: 1. Tensho - Seal script of the Chang, Chou and Ch'in dynasties (1500-200 B.C.) is the oldest and the most formal style. It is used now for official certificates and seals. This script consisted of well-balanced horizontal and vertical, left and right symmetrical elements. Over the years, however, these characters tended to become somewhat vertically elongated.
There are almost no examples of even geniuses creating outstanding art without reference to the past traditions. In order to transcend the rules, one must study and master the techniques and follow the moral values of the teachers of the past.
Respect the tradition, master it and find your self expression within it, such has long been the teaching of the Kampo Ryu in Shodo.
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Kampo Cultural Center
31 Bond St.
New York, NY 10012
Tel. 212 228-3063
Fax 212 674-6788
clg@kampo.com