My class was taught by a woman named Edoyo Sekoh, which is actually her artist name, not her real name. She holds a degree in Calligraphy from the Tokyo Gakugei University, which I thought was fabulous. I didn’t even realize you could earn a degree in Calligraphy! A professional Calligraphist….that made my day! We began the class with an introduction to Shodo: “Japanese writing KANJI with a brush. Play with color ink.” I like that! Play with color ink. “You enjoy writing the Chinese character of Japan with the brush, and making the work today.” And enjoy I did. We were given a list of kanji we might want to try, and since I am decorating the guest room with some of my “artwork,” I chose friendship友情.
Edoyo demonstrated what we should be doing with orange ink, and then we mimicked her using black ink. It was really very interesting, and I enjoyed having a professional to learn from. After each attempt, she would go over ours with orange ink to show us where we needed to improve.
My very first attempt was my best, and I got worse and worse, though I enjoyed it immensely. After we had practiced our character, Edoyo wrote out our names in Kanji so we could sign our work. It was amazing how difficult it was to write my name in Kanji. And you have to write it very tiny. My name ended up being almost as big as the character I was writing, but I figure it will get better with time. It was very calming and peaceful to sit there focusing on each brush stroke, and I am really excited to be trying my hand at this beautiful Japanese art.
Awesome!!
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