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The Influence of historical scripts on contemporary calligraphy and type design

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-01-17, 00:33 authored by Man LingMan Ling
Traditionally, calligraphers and palaeographers seldom co-operate or collaborate. This is somewhat surprising considering both disciplines deal with the written texts in one form or another. One could argue that if we learn from each other's respective fields, it would be mutually beneficial and enrich each other's practice. This paper discusses the relationship between calligraphy, palaeography, and type design. It focuses on the question of how a calligrapher might approach and analyse a manuscript and how historical scripts have been an inspirational area for contemporary calligraphy and type design. This paper is written from a practitioner's perspective in describing the processes of how calligraphy is analysed. From looking at manuscripts and documents, what elements can be obtained to develop ideas into design and artwork? What are the processes involved in using both traditional and digital methods? In contemporary calligraphy, what cross-cultural elements can we learn to enrich our traditions? This paper will use examples of my work and that of others as models for discussion.

History

Journal

Open Information Science

Volume

5

Issue

1

Start page

215

End page

232

Total pages

18

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter

Place published

Germany

Language

English

Copyright

© 2021 Manny Ling, published by De Gruyter. Open Access.This work is licensed under the Creative Commons AttributionNonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.

Former Identifier

2006120771

Esploro creation date

2023-04-02

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