China Daily

New show honors calligraph­y master

If you go

- By WANG KAIHAO wangkaihao@chinadaily.com.cn JIANG DONG / CHINA DAILY

After contributi­ng about 6,700 handwritte­n characters of clerical script, or lishu, to Microsoft Office and other software packages, Buddhist and a respected scholar Liu Bingsen (1937-2005) succeeded in etching out his place in the history of modern Chinese calligraph­y.

To honor his achievemen­ts in lishu and other styles of Chinese calligraph­y, an exhibition marking the 80th anniversar­y of Liu’s birth kicked off last week in the Palace Museum in Beijing, also known as the Forbidden City, his former place of work.

The exhibition, Bountiful Grasses on Red Walls, To the Ink-Soaked Memories, which shows about 70 of his iconic artworks and related historical documents, will run until February.

This time, not only Liu’s iconic clerical script but also his works in other calligraph­y styles — such as regular and cursive scripts — are also on display. Many of his works of calligraph­y based on stanzas from ancient Chinese poems are included in the show, along with some of his lesserknow­n paintings.

Several exhibited artworks were donated by his family to the Palace Museum, which is known for being very particular when it comes to selecting works by modern artists. A seminar reviewing Liu’s life work was also held at the museum recently.

“His calligraph­y used inherited traditions well,” says Shan Jixiang, director of the Palace Museum. “And it was also very close to the public aesthetic and practical needs of the time. He made it his social responsibi­lity to improve education about calligraph­y.”

When working at the museit um, Liu also studied many key cultural relics. For example, he was largely responsibl­e for making facsimiles of ancient Chinese paintings and works of calligraph­y. One highlight was his replica of a silk painting found in Mawangdui, in a Han Dynasty (202 BC-220 AD) tumulus, or burial mound, in Changsha, Hunan province.

Liu published dozens of different 8:30 am to 4:30 pm, until Feb 23, closed on Mondays; Hall of Martial Valor (Wuying Dian), in the western wing of the Palace Museum, 4 Jingshan Qianjie, Dongcheng district, Beijing. Online reservatio­ns for tickets are needed on the museum’s official English website en.dpm.org.cn. calligraph­y copybooks over his lifetime, which sold millions of copies.

“Liu’s creativity and inclusiven­ess of different schools makes his clerical script work stand out,” Su Shishu, head of the China Calligraph­ers Associatio­n, says. “Calligraph­y was considered remote to people’s daily lives before his time, but Liu was a pioneer in bringing back to the grassroots.”

In Liu’s early years, Chinese calligraph­y circles were dominated by a trend favoring bizarre styles, but Liu set a good example and helped steer its developmen­t back in the right direction.

“He urged calligraph­ers to adopt a sincere attitude, to create something more positive and adopt beautiful themes,” Su says. “That helped to nurture many of the new generation of talent later.”

He also points out that Liu was a key ambassador for Chinese calligraph­y around the world.

Often traveling to the Americas, Europe and other Asian countries to promote calligraph­y through lectures and exhibition­s, Liu emphasized the importance of cross-border cultural communicat­ion. He visited Japan on more than 30 occasions, and was widely respected by in calligraph­ers in the country.

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view a calligraph­ic work by the late artist Liu Bingsen at an ongoing show at the Palace Museum in Beijing. The show features many of his works of calligraph­y, along with some of his lesser-known paintings.
Visitors view a calligraph­ic work by the late artist Liu Bingsen at an ongoing show at the Palace Museum in Beijing. The show features many of his works of calligraph­y, along with some of his lesser-known paintings.

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