Skip to content

Celebrating life with the shodō brush

At the end of January and start of February we ran two sessions, our monthly group at KSD centre and the other a special group for students in the west end of Glasgow. One of the phrases we brushed was 福寿 Fukuju – which can be translated as luck and longevity, or blessings and congratulations.

Celebrating life with the shodō brush

At KSD Blair introduced the characters and their background seen in old styles such as the tensho (with pictograms including symbols of long life and sake for blessings) before we enjoyed some loosening up and basic stroke practice. We then started brushing the kaisho standard ‘boxy’ script, working on the two kanji in a single page of hanshi paper, finding the chushin centre line and balance between the characters.

Celebrating life with the shodō brush

We then went on to sōsho ‘grass’ full cursive style, this time copying Fukuju written by Blair’s first Shodō teacher Wakabayashi Shūjō (based Toyama, Japan) who enjoyed brushing these characters often on paper, calligraphy board or even elegant Chinese vases, sometimes on a very large scale with the expressive marking he loved. It was a fun example to work from, so well done to everyone trying out writing his energetic style. Thanks for joining and catch up with you again next time!

If you are interested in a shodō calligraphy workshop or event for your group, please contact us for more info.