I've been given a few opportunities lately to show people how to paint with a Chinese brush. I was apprehensive at first about shouldering such a responsibility. It was going to take time away from me twiddling my thumbs. I had better use for my time! Then I was timorous about my own inadequacy. I did not want to be branded as a dilettante. I eventually placated myself that my job was to offer my knowledge as a coach and not how well I could do it as a player.
The fundamentals of using a Chinese round brush is in mastering the brush tip within the brushstroke. Hence center-tip and side-tip. Such techniques can best be seen in paintings of bamboo.
A bamboo painting by Shi Tao (1642-1707)
Bamboo is also symbolic for being a good citizen. Bamboo is stiff, yet flexible. It is difficult to break a bamboo. Bamboo is a symbol for humility, because it is hollow in the center. The bamboo represents integrity, as the word for the "node" in a bamboo is a homonym for the word "integrity" in the Chinese language. Bamboo branches out only at the nodes, thus a mature bamboo plant shows distinct layers of leaves, resembling rungs of a ladder. Hence the bamboo teaches us to shelter and nurture those who are below us, allowing them to grow as well. My mentor encouraged us to paint bamboo with reverence to the virtues of the bamboo. Then I had a student painted a Christmas card with the bamboo as a wreath. Definitely couldn't fault the originality, but there was a cultural disconnect somewhere.
Rungs of leaves on bamboo plants,
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