Monday, October 1, 2012

Chinese characters, or art?

I popped across the border from HK to China a couple of weeks ago (I have a multi-entry visa, so I may as well use it!), and happened to see a couple of really clever stylised Chinese characters that felt more arty than just characters - certainly very cleverly put together.


The first one I took off the side of a box of tissues - which in itself is pushing the boundaries of what qualifies as art! Take a look ...
To my rather untrained eye, it looks like this character:  (wēi) - which has a dictionary definition of "power / might / prestige", and a Heisig keyword of 'might'.   I actually think it's quite beautifully done!


This is the second character I saw, at the China Ferry Terminal building:
This one was easier to identify, being  (hǎi) - meaning "sea / ocean / maritime".  I left the full picture in, so you can see it is the logo for the Marine Department.  The water radical on the left has been replaced by a stream of water, and the 母 (mother radical) has been made to look like a flag - which suits what it is designed to represent.


These are not the first times I've seen characters written up so artistically, but this time I happened to take pictures of them. If you have seen other characters done unusually, please include links below ...

9 comments:

  1. How interesting! I always imagined that these existed back when I began my studies and always wondered how I would be able to read them. We have them in the US everywhere with our letters so I knew they had to be in China. Glad to see them and understand what they mean. Thanks, Greg!

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    1. Actually, that was my secret little victory as well, when I saw *and* recognised the characters. Being surrounded with so many fonts in the signs around me on a day-to-day basis, I'm certainly getting better at recognising non-standard styles.

      Although handwriting, I'm afraid, still evades my comprehension.

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    2. Ha! Handwriting is so crazy, but think about it -- if you can read the different fonts now, you'll be able to read handwriting soon enough!

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  2. I always like interesting Chinese typography! Cool pictures.

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    1. Thanks Niel. Let us know if you come across any unusual version. Out of curiosity, because I never noticed at the time, are most of the 'Chinese' people in South Africa from mainland China? Or HK?

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  3. About your question above. Most Chinese South Africans are from Taiwan and Guangdong. You can read their history here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_South_Africans

    Also here is a cool photo - taken at a restaurant I often visit to eat Gong Bao chicken 宫保鸡丁 Gōngbǎo Jīdīng). They use the idea of spicy chillies representing the char 川 which is short for 四川 Sìchuān - it took me seeing this about 2 or 3 times before I made the connection. http://instagram.com/p/QYgY3slrcE/

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  4. Hey Peckish, thanks for the link - just finished reading it ... really interesting to finally understand the background of Chinese in SA like that, thanks!

    And that photo is really clever - appreciate your posting the link.

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  5. Hi Greg, Do you mind if I add your images to the Typography section on ChineseHacks with attribution? ( http://chinesehacks.com/category/typography/ )
    Thanks!

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    1. Yes, that would be great - please go ahead. (I didn't know that page existed - looks really good!)

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