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Arts & Culture
Arts & Culture
UPDATED: November 6, 2009 NO. 45 NOVEMBER 12, 2009
Standing the Test of Time
Seal engraving, a pearl of Chinese traditional arts, has been included on the world intangible cultural heritage list
By YUAN YUAN
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Growing popularity

CAREFUL ENGRAVER: Luo Pengpeng, Executive Vice President of the Chinese Academy of Seal Engraving, makes a seal (YUAN DALI) 

Luo is now a postgraduate tutor of three students majoring in seal engraving art at the CASE. According to Luo, this is the only institute with a major in seal engraving art that is acknowledged by the State Council and the Ministry of Education. The program was set up in 2006 and began to accept postgraduates in 2007. Luo is China's first postgraduate tutor for seal engraving art.

More than 10 mainland colleges have now set up seal engraving art programs, with more than 1,000 students enrolled, according to the CASE.

Luo also disclosed that there are more than 100 organizations for spreading and developing seal engraving art in China, both folk and official.

"The difficulties in handing down this art to young people mainly lie in two aspects. One is that since all the characters on the seals are in the ancient calligraphy style, which modern people seldom see and use, they have to learn how to write that before they can make the seals. Young people mostly don't have the patience," said Luo. "The second aspect is that more and more people prefer to type instead of writing, let alone use a knife to carve stone."

Exhibitions and exchanges

"Holding exhibitions is one of the ways to inspire creation and raise the creative level," said Luo.

In August 2008, the CASE organized The Eternity of Seals—The First Exhibition of Shoushan Stone Seal Engraving Art of China at the National Center for Performing Arts as one of the important cultural exhibitions during the Beijing Olympics.

Unlike previous seal engraving exhibitions, which displayed only the finished red seals, this exhibition showed the complete story of seal engraving. It paid attention to the exhibition of seal impressions, seal surfaces, seal material and seal knobs, and designed the seal exhibition into an elegant, open studio-style show. It also combined appreciation, calligraphy, book reading, and music enjoyment with a tea party to form an atmosphere and environment of traditional Chinese culture.

Meanwhile, this art form has also gone abroad as part of cultural exchanges.

Held from February 18 to 27, 2006, an exhibition on China's seal engraving culture held in Torino, Italy was the first exhibition of seal engraving art in Europe. The engravers at the exhibition also demonstrated the process of making seals.

In Asia, many exchanges have been made with Japan, Singapore and South Korea. The Eternity of Seals—The First Exhibition of Shoushan Stone Seal Engraving Art of China traveled to Japan in 2008.

The "Beautiful Land" exhibition is also called the Exhibition of Chinese and Japanese Seal Engraving Art. It displays 382 art pieces, including 315 done by Chinese engravers and 67 by Japanese engravers.

Next year, the CASE plans to hold another large international seal engraving exhibition to strengthen exchanges among engravers from different countries.

"The goal of the exchanges is to explore the differences among different cultural backgrounds and learn from each other," said Luo.

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