Bodhidharma Sumi-E

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  • Опубликовано: 30 май 2008
  • I was believing Bodhidharma was Japanese. Because I played a game called "dharma-san" a lot. This is said "tag" in my dictionary. (as always no idea for the right words) anyway, everybody knows a tag called dharma-san ga koronda. and lots of designed dharma figure coloured red are here. even I loved to have a "dharma box lunch" at Takasaki station which was on the way to the country house. It futures the dhrma face(see the link). So my image of dharma is from this box lunch and thought evry kind person like a priest in the cinema.
    The real bodhidharma was not like today's deformed one. He was very stubborn and severe. He was from India, so he got large eyes and long nose. I was surprised at Hakuin or Sesshu bodhidharma paintings because they have very severe dharma san.
    Tips:
    1. Front neckband is the key to draw the tradional asian figure wearing kimono style clothes. I made the hard line first which was inspired by the Hakuin's line and Sesshu's cave rock line.
    2. First, light black (more water than usual) is on the eyebrow, then before getting dry fully, put more black stroke added. So you can get some depth, profound expression.
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Комментарии • 25

  • @jenacorn
    @jenacorn 16 лет назад

    Lovely painting. I really appreciate it when you show the prep work on the side as well as your painting.
    Tag is a game played in the USA. One person is "it" and they chase the other players around. When a chased player gets tagged (touched) by the "it" player, the tagged player becomes "it" and the chasing continues. Every game can have slight variations and conditions added, but that is the bare bones of the game.

  • @OckGal
    @OckGal 16 лет назад

    I only just finished watching it today. Yesterday (the day between your replies), I was watching something else. So you replied both days I was watching it, hehe!

  • @Mark-jy4qt
    @Mark-jy4qt 6 лет назад

    ooohhh =() my first video i watched from your channel =) i subscribed ,,,,, thank you for sharing! i like =()

  • @magdasleichertova6127
    @magdasleichertova6127 11 лет назад +1

    Neuveritelne opravdový pohled,krasne :-)

  • @ghostexorcist
    @ghostexorcist 13 лет назад

    @cuvtixo Shaolin attributed their martial strength and military prowess to the Bodhisattva Vajrapani as far back as the 9th century and as recently as the early 20th century (over 1000 years). Shaolin has only considered Damo to be the creator of their arts for a few decades. The first source to actually connect Damo to martial arts comes from the 1920s, and it was written outside the monastery in a satirical novel. So, only this generation of Shaolin considers him to be the creator ...

  • @aiko4321
    @aiko4321 15 лет назад

    I love this... I hv couple of Bodhidharma pictures in both my dojos.. Can u send this too? lol
    Great work Kazu San... Gambatte Kudasai.. :)

  • @ghostexorcist
    @ghostexorcist 13 лет назад

    @cuvtixo Correction, the novel was published in a magazine serial from 1904-1907, not in the 1920s.

  • @TaoOfTheFist
    @TaoOfTheFist 14 лет назад

    @lafir the reason his eyes were so big is because, as legend goes, is because during his nine years of meditation on Songshan he cut off his eyelids. From the place where he threw his eyelids grew two tea bushes (again legend). So his eyes aren't bulging per se, just lidless.

  • @OckGal
    @OckGal 16 лет назад

    That looks amazing!

  • @zetzori
    @zetzori 16 лет назад

    wow i love your art too ^^, i just draw mine with pencil =(

  • @DragOzze
    @DragOzze 15 лет назад

    you are like master of this art ;p

  • @squirlmy
    @squirlmy 13 лет назад

    @ghostexorcist The Shaolin Monastery itself credits Bodhidharma with the introduction of martial arts there, and notice the difference between the phrase "patron saint" as opposed to "inventor." And certainly the martial arts of China (then Japan) dominates the modern world. It is certainly correct to say he was patron saint of all martial arts.

  • @kijikis
    @kijikis 16 лет назад

    I love you art.

  • @OckGal
    @OckGal 16 лет назад

    That's scary! I watched "It" today AND Stephen King showed up in my dream this morning.

  • @MichaelHartleyBambooStudio
    @MichaelHartleyBambooStudio 13 лет назад

    Like your painting. he looks a little like a muppet, the cookie monster? from sesame street...

  • @Pintoleite3
    @Pintoleite3 14 лет назад

    @physkoz
    he's using a heavier paper, i think they are 80g each.

  • @OckGal
    @OckGal 16 лет назад

    Not bad. Hot now that Summer is on its way.

  • @TreeGreenOak
    @TreeGreenOak 10 лет назад

    Form is emptiness and emptiness is form, are the same or different?

  • @ghostexorcist
    @ghostexorcist 13 лет назад

    @cuvtixo ... And calling him the "patron saint of all martial arts" is not valid either because countries all over the world have their own combat systems. Not all martial arts emanate from the east, they are ingrained in every culture due to war. Pictures of boxing and wrestling appear on Egyptian Wall carvings. The Greeks had Pankration. The Medieval German school of fencing also had its own form of joint-locks. Attributing the martial arts to Damo is just a "fad" at this point in history.

  • @squirlmy
    @squirlmy 13 лет назад

    @ghostexorcist 無 MU!

  • @ghostexorcist
    @ghostexorcist 13 лет назад

    @cuvtixo 能

  • @squirlmy
    @squirlmy 13 лет назад

    @ghostexorcist 无 (Wu)

  • @ghostexorcist
    @ghostexorcist 15 лет назад

    There is no historical evidence that he created Shaolin Martial arts. Martial arts existed in China well before the building of the Shaolin monastery. Other countries have their own forms of martial arts as well. So, the statement that he was "the patron saint of all martial arts" is incorrect.

  • @squirlmy
    @squirlmy 13 лет назад

    @ghostexorcist 摇滚乐!

  • @ucntcit
    @ucntcit 14 лет назад

    中国人禅宗!