Category: Chinese Character & Japanese Kanji Calligraphy Wall Scrolls

BUDDHA
HOTOKE Japanese Kanji Wall Scroll

BUDDHA - HOTOKE Japanese Kanji Wall Scroll
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121.5cm
47¾"
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line
arrow 67.2cm
26½"
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Typical Gallery Price: $300.00

Your Price: $88.88U.S. Dollars

GBP £58.00British Pounds
Euro €69.74Euro
Canadian $92.66Canadian Dollars
Australian $97.51Australian Dollars

SOLD

Similar artwork may be available, please post your request on our forum if interested



Approximate Measurements

Painting: 49cm x 68.5cm  ≈  19¼" x 27"

Silk Scroll: 58.2cm x 121.5cm  ≈  23" x 47¾"

Width at Wooden Knobs: 67.2cm  ≈  26½"

Information about caring for your new Wall Scroll

佛

Buddha - Buddhism

Japanese Kanji / Chinese character / old Korean Hanja Calligraphy Wall Scroll

BUDDHA - HOTOKE Japanese Kanji Wall Scroll close up view

Close up view of the artwork mounted to this silk brocade wall scroll

This particular calligraphy is done in Kai-Gyosho (Running-Regular Script). This style features bold but flowing strokes. It's written on Buddha-Orange xuan paper, with gold flakes. This orange color is used almost exclusively for Buddhist-related Japanese and Chinese calligraphy.

This is the Kanji that is Romanized and pronounced "Hotoke" (Hoe Toe Kay) in Japanese. This Kanji represents The Buddha and Buddhism. This Kanji and concept originally came from China (after Buddhism came from India) where this character is Romanized and pronounced "Fo".

The form written on this scroll is the ancient Chinese form that is also used in Japan (usually for religious purposes). It is also common to write Hotoke in Japanese in the alternate form which looks like this: 仏

The Kanji version written on this wall scroll will be readily-understood by both Chinese and most Japanese people (non-Buddhist Japanese people may not immediately recognize this more ancient form).

Want a Buddhism wall scroll completely customized to your desires?
Link: Options for custom Buddha and Buddhism Chinese / Japanese Kanji / Korean Hanja calligraphy are available here!


Chinese and Japanese Calligraphy is only practiced by those with a keen and agile hand. It is an art that dates back thousands of years. Great artists, writers, and poets of China and Japan are often admired for their calligraphy ability and style.

This piece was done by Master Calligrapher Michiko Imai of Nara, Japan.

To create this art, Master Imai used special calligraphy ink on Buddha-orange gold-flaked xuan paper (rice paper). The raw calligraphy was then taken to our mounting shop in Beijing where some of the best mounters in China laminated this to more sheets of xuan paper and mounted it as a beautiful silk brocade wall scroll.


Authentic Japanese Calligraphy by Japanese Master Calligrapher Michiko Imai

Japanese Master Calligrapher Michiko Imai

Japanese Master Calligrapher Michiko Imai.
Shown here crafting her artwork which follows
a 1600-year Japanese tradition.

今井美智子 (Imai, Michiko) was born and raised in Nara, Japan. She began her studies of Calligraphy at the age of four at Baikou Calligraphy School. When Michiko was 25 years old, she received a membership to the Tenshin Kai (calligraphy society) and her life as a calligrapher began. Michiko progressed to the next level, becoming a member of the Cho-ko Guild which is the most prestigious calligraphy society in Japan. During her apprenticeship, she taught calligraphy and studied the art of Japanese silk scroll making (hyougu) at Mizuno Hyougu-ten.

Japanese calligraphy wall scroll

A sample of her
work in Gyosho
(Xingshu) style.

In 1998, Master Calligrapher Michiko Imai was awarded the highest rank in Japanese Calligraphy of Shihan. She currently holds a guild licence for teaching both calligraphy and instructing teachers to teach calligraphy.

Michiko Imai is among the few to have won multiple best of category awards in national competitions (Japan). Her work has been displayed at the Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum, Osaka Municipal Museum Of Art, Nara City Museum Of Art and Kyoto Municipal Museum Of Art.

In Addition to being a calligrapher, she is also an "artisan artist" (Hyougushi). Ms. Imai now resides half of the year in Japan and the other in Boston.

It should be noted that Master Imai signs her artwork with the "art name" of 美嶂 (Beautiful Cliff/Mountain). So this is what you will see just before the red signature stamp on her calligraphy pieces.


Japanese calligraphy painting combo

Kana Sosho
painting combination
(like Chinese Xing-Caoshu).

Japanese Kana calligraphy

Kana style Japanese calligraphy
(similar to Chinese "Running Caoshu").

Japanese love calligraphy

Single-Kanji
Love
calligraphy
in Kai-Gyosho
(Xing-Kaishu)
style.


Completely handmade, yet affordable...

If you've shopped much for Japanese calligraphy, you know that it generally starts from $200 and up. In fact, I can show you a catalog full of Japanese calligraphy priced at $2000 and up (someone sent it to me, thinking that I'd like to blow $12,000 on a wall scroll).

So how can we offer authentic Japanese calligraphy for such a low price? The short answer is that I work with people who are more interested in the art than getting rich. Master Michiko Imai has given us a very special opportunity to offer her artwork at a price that most people can afford.
The second part of the equation is the fact that we are building all of our own wall scrolls by hand in our workshop in Beijing. You can see how we build these wall scrolls by visiting our How we build these Asian art wall scrolls page.
All of this means you get high-quality artwork with no "middle man markup".

Typical Gallery Price: $300.00

Your Price: $88.88U.S. Dollars

GBP £58.00British Pounds
Euro €69.74Euro
Canadian $92.66Canadian Dollars
Australian $97.51Australian Dollars

SOLD

Similar artwork may be available, please post your request on our forum if interested



All orders billed in U.S. Dollars.
Other currencies shown for reference at approximate exchange rates.


Item Location: USA
details


Gary's random little things about China:

Where's my fortune cookie?

So after traveling to China, you have just finished your first meal in a real Chinese restaurant.
But the bill comes, and the waiter forgot to bring everyone their fortune cookies!
Well, actually not...
You see, fortune cookies did not come from China (at least not directly).
One legend has it in the late 1800s or early 1900s, a Chinese man running a noodle making shop in San Francisco accidentally mixed a bunch of sugar in his dough, and didn't want to waste it. So he made cookies and stuck papers with people's fortunes on them as a novelty.
In the end, it's really the Chinese visitors to America that are confused when the waiter brings them a blob of sugary noodle dough with a piece of paper stuck in it.

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