Sailing the boat of tradition : Mi Fu’s revision and innovation in calligraphy

The affiliation of text and visual material in the Chinese calligraphic tradition has a rich history informed by ancient models and continual innovation. My thesis explores the Northern Sung dynasty calligrapher Mi Fu’s (1051-1107) appropriation and contention of the legacy of the Jin Dynasty calli...

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Main Author: Hudson, Adah Liana
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12643
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-126432018-01-05T17:23:45Z Sailing the boat of tradition : Mi Fu’s revision and innovation in calligraphy Hudson, Adah Liana The affiliation of text and visual material in the Chinese calligraphic tradition has a rich history informed by ancient models and continual innovation. My thesis explores the Northern Sung dynasty calligrapher Mi Fu’s (1051-1107) appropriation and contention of the legacy of the Jin Dynasty calligraphers Wang Xizhi (307-365) and Wang Xianzhi (344-388), both icons in the history of Chinese calligraphy. Following the Wang’s rise to fame in the fourth century, historical texts delineate the importance of the father, Wang Xizhi, and discredit the son, Wang Xianzhi. Over half a millennia later, Mi Fu boldly negated this claim, asserting that Wang Xianzhi’s father could not compare to his son’s “transcendent and untrammelled” perfection. My research regarding Mi Fu’s study of the Two Wangs brings forward Mi Fu’s disruption of the conventional adherence to the father’s style, demonstrating Mi Fu’s appropriation of the calligraphic model of Wang Xianzhi. As a scholar-official, Mi Fu’s manipulation of the foundations of calligraphy was a daring transformation of calligraphy into a form of individual expression. Resulting from his study of past calligraphic models Mi Fu developed a distinctive approach to calligraphy. This is exemplified by Mi Fu’s pivotal work Letter About a Coral Tree. Informed by Francois Jullien’s theory of detour and access, I discuss Mi Fu’s stylistic development as an oblique approach guided by ingenious detours. Furthermore, I situate Mi Fu’s manipulation of text through Derrida’s theory of writing and difference. In conceptualizing Mi Fu’s work in this way I consider both the ideological and technical innovation of Mi Fu’s calligraphic oeuvre in eleventh century China. Arts, Faculty of Art History, Visual Art and Theory, Department of Graduate 2009-08-31T21:42:37Z 2009-08-31T21:42:37Z 2009 2009-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12643 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ 126285 bytes application/pdf University of British Columbia
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language English
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description The affiliation of text and visual material in the Chinese calligraphic tradition has a rich history informed by ancient models and continual innovation. My thesis explores the Northern Sung dynasty calligrapher Mi Fu’s (1051-1107) appropriation and contention of the legacy of the Jin Dynasty calligraphers Wang Xizhi (307-365) and Wang Xianzhi (344-388), both icons in the history of Chinese calligraphy. Following the Wang’s rise to fame in the fourth century, historical texts delineate the importance of the father, Wang Xizhi, and discredit the son, Wang Xianzhi. Over half a millennia later, Mi Fu boldly negated this claim, asserting that Wang Xianzhi’s father could not compare to his son’s “transcendent and untrammelled” perfection. My research regarding Mi Fu’s study of the Two Wangs brings forward Mi Fu’s disruption of the conventional adherence to the father’s style, demonstrating Mi Fu’s appropriation of the calligraphic model of Wang Xianzhi. As a scholar-official, Mi Fu’s manipulation of the foundations of calligraphy was a daring transformation of calligraphy into a form of individual expression. Resulting from his study of past calligraphic models Mi Fu developed a distinctive approach to calligraphy. This is exemplified by Mi Fu’s pivotal work Letter About a Coral Tree. Informed by Francois Jullien’s theory of detour and access, I discuss Mi Fu’s stylistic development as an oblique approach guided by ingenious detours. Furthermore, I situate Mi Fu’s manipulation of text through Derrida’s theory of writing and difference. In conceptualizing Mi Fu’s work in this way I consider both the ideological and technical innovation of Mi Fu’s calligraphic oeuvre in eleventh century China. === Arts, Faculty of === Art History, Visual Art and Theory, Department of === Graduate
author Hudson, Adah Liana
spellingShingle Hudson, Adah Liana
Sailing the boat of tradition : Mi Fu’s revision and innovation in calligraphy
author_facet Hudson, Adah Liana
author_sort Hudson, Adah Liana
title Sailing the boat of tradition : Mi Fu’s revision and innovation in calligraphy
title_short Sailing the boat of tradition : Mi Fu’s revision and innovation in calligraphy
title_full Sailing the boat of tradition : Mi Fu’s revision and innovation in calligraphy
title_fullStr Sailing the boat of tradition : Mi Fu’s revision and innovation in calligraphy
title_full_unstemmed Sailing the boat of tradition : Mi Fu’s revision and innovation in calligraphy
title_sort sailing the boat of tradition : mi fu’s revision and innovation in calligraphy
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12643
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