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Seal Carving
Seal-cutting is traditionally listed along with painting,
calligraphy and poetry as one of the "four arts" expected
of the accomplished scholar and a unique part of the Chinese
cultural heritage. A seal stamp in red is not only the signature
on a work of calligraphy or painting but an indispensable
touch to liven it up.
The art dates back about 3,700 years to the Yin Dynasty and
has its origin in the cutting of oracle inscriptions on tortoise
shells. It flourished in the Qin Dynasty of 22 centuries ago,
when people engraved their names on utensils and documents
(of bamboo and wood) to show ownership or authorship. Out
of this grew the cutting of personal names on small blocks
of horn, jade or wood, namely the seals as we know them today.
As in other countries, seals may be used by official departments
as well as private individuals. From as early as the Warring
States Period (475- 221 B.C.) an official seal would be bestowed
as token of authorization by the head of a state to a subject
whom he appointed to a high office. The seal, in other words,
stood for the office and corresponding power. Private seals
are likewise used to stamp personal names on various papers
for purposes of authentication or as tokens of good faith.
Seals reflect the development of written Chinese. The earliest
ones, those of the Qin and Han dynasties, bear the zhuan or
curly script, which explains why the art of seal-cutting is
still called zhuanke and also why the zhuan script is also
known in English as "seal characters". As time went on, the
other script styles appeared one after another on Chinese
seals, which may now be cut in any style except the cursive
at the option of the artist.
Characters on seals may be cut in relief or in intaglio.
The materials for seals vary with different types of owners.
Average persons normally have wood, stone or horn seals, whereas
noted public figures would probably prefer seals made of red
stained Changhua stone, jade, agate, crystal, ivory and other
more valuable materials. Monarchs in the old days used gold
or the most precious stones to make their imperial or royal
seals. Today Chinese government offices at lower levels wood
ones.
Seals cut as works of art should excel in three aspects--
calligraphy, composition and the graver's handwork. The artist
must be good at writing various styles of the Chinese script.
He should know how to arrange within a limited space a number
of characters-- some compact with many strokes and others
sketchy with very few-- to achieve a vigorous or graceful
effect. He should also be familiar with the various materials--
stone, brass or ivory-- so that he may apply the cutting knife
with the right exertion, technique and even rhythm. For the
initiated to watch a master engraver at work is like seeing
a delightful stage performance.
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