Calligraphy in Cursive Script

Collections
1029110
Title
Calligraphy in Cursive Script
Creator
Year/Period
Undated
Region
Singapore
Dimension
Image size: 83.5 x 33.8 cm,
Frame size: 177 x 51.4 cm (M)
Accession No.
1994-04503
Credit Line
Gift of the artist

Born in Jiangsu, China, to a family of distinguished scholars, Reverend Song Nian (1911-1997), commoner name Song Tiecheng, studied in a private school and practised calligraphy from the tender age of six. At 16, he entered the monastery and shortly after, enrolled in Tsinghua University in 1928 to study literature. A student of famous Jiangnan scholar Xiao Tiu’an and other teachers, Song Nian consolidated what he had learnt and eventually developed an original script, known as the ‘Song Nian Style’. He emigrated to Singapore in 1961 and was the head of Puti Temple. Well-versed in the traditional Chinese art forms, namely poetry, painting, calligraphy and seal-carving, Song Nian was a renowned figure in Singapore’s art scene. The cursive script, which evolved from the old clerical script during the Qin dynasty, was initially used as shorthand for the complicated clerical script; it later gained prominence during the Han dynasty. Song Nian is known for using the expressive cursive script for his insightful poems.