China Daily

Painter teaches beauty of calligraph­y

- By ZHAO HUANXIN in Bowling Green, Kentucky zhaohuanxi­n@ chinadaily.com.cn

Having a painter as the instructor is a good way to teach Chinese calligraph­y to beginners. At least that was the case for new students at Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green.

In a classroom on the first floor of the university’s library, which has housed the Confucius Institute since 2010, Liu Shuling, an artist from China, used a brush, some ink and stacks of paper to teach a small class of avid calligraph­y learners how to write Chinese characters on Wednesday.

A video of Liu teaching the class how to draw characters with a brush went viral on the internet. By Sunday it had generated nearly 1 million views and 13,000 likes on Miaopai, a Chinese video sharing and live streaming service.

“America,” the 76-year-old said, “is transliter­ated into two char act er s—meiguo, meaning‘beautiful land’ in Chinese .”

As he wrote the first character, mei, on a whiteboard, his students watched a shape looking like a sheep with two long, sharp horns appear above a graphic representi­ng “big”.

“It has long been believed in China that a big sheep is beautiful, hence the meaning of the word mei,” Liu said. “But I’d rather believe it represents a man wearing sheep-horned headgear that makes him look great.”

He further pointed out that mei is a type of character called huiyi — characters formed by a combinatio­n of elements thought to be logically associated. As for guo, the second character in mei guo — America or the United States — Liu drew a circle representi­ng a walled land to be defended by a dagger-axe.

This character belongs to the most common type of Chinese character, called xingsheng, created by combining a semantic with a phonetic element intended to remind the reader of the word’s pronunciat­ion, according to Liu.

The Chinese traditiona­lly divide the characters into six types, which also include xiangxing, characters that were originally pictograph­s, Liu said. He painted an animal standing on its rear feet.

“It is a horse,” several students yelled. “Yes, this is the Chinese character for horse,” the teacher said, giving them a gleeful thumbs-up.

Shaden Melky, a consultant at the university, said she had always wanted to learn Chinese calligraph­y, and her first try was fascinatin­g.

“This is my first opportunit­y and it’s wonderful,” Melky said. “It is also nice to learn the history of calligraph­y as well.”

 ?? ZHAO HUANXIN / CHINA DAILY ?? Liu Shuling, a Chinese artist (center), teaches Western Kentucky University faculty Carol Watwood and Daniel Peach how to hold a brush after lecturing at the university’s Confucius Institute in Bowling Green on Wednesday.
ZHAO HUANXIN / CHINA DAILY Liu Shuling, a Chinese artist (center), teaches Western Kentucky University faculty Carol Watwood and Daniel Peach how to hold a brush after lecturing at the university’s Confucius Institute in Bowling Green on Wednesday.

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