8A NEWS THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THURSDAY, MAY 10, 2007 CALLIGRAPHY (CONTINUED FROM 1A) Cathy Ledeker sits back from her drawing table to study a letter she calligraphed. Her studio is a work in progress but she is slowly starting to get organized and is no longer working from cardboard boxes filled with her art supplies. LEFT: A side table next to Leeder's drawing table is filled with colored pencils, inks, paints and calligraphy pens. RIGHT: Leeder scratches her calligraphy pen across a piece of paper several times to get the right flow and consistency of ink before writing a letter. Her craft dominant mode of mass communication and at a time when computers threaten to replace printed words with electronic ones, Ledeker is one of a few who still make a living inscribing letters by hand. "I don't think they have a word for me," she said. "There's the definition, which is the art of beautiful writing," she said. "But then I have this quote on my desk at work that says, 'Calligraphy must dance.'" - ETC * ETC * ETC * ETC * ETC * ETC * For Ledeker, calligraphy is alive but eternal. ETC • ETC • ETC • ETC • ETC • ETC • ETC • ETC • ETC • ETC • ETC • ETC • ETC • ETC • ETC • ETC • ETC When Ledeker begins a project, she starts by sketching it in pencil. Starting with ink would make her too nervous. "In terms of what she does, primarily with illumination and painting, she's one of the best in the country," he said. She draws widely spaced horizontal lines to guide her lettering, much To make it dance, Ledeker also uses illumination — illustrations interwoven with letters of the alphabet, sometimes adorned with thin sheets of gold leaf. Ledeker specializes in combining calligraphy, illumination and painting to create a fusion of artistic styles. The only calligrapher listed in Lawrence's Yellow Pages, Ledeker supported herself and two daughters for 25 years through calligraphy and related arts. Ledeker worked with Mike Sull, a Gardner calligrapher, to create a mural at the Kansas City Public Library's downtown branch in 2004. Sull said Ledeker's marriage of styles separated her from other calligraphers. "I'm not a very good speller, so I have to double-check everything very carefully before I ink it in," she said. Now she works full-time teaching art classes at Van Go Mobile Arts in Lawrence, but she still has time for calligraphy on weekends. Combining the written word with an artistic freedom machines can't match. Ledeker believes the human hand still has a place in an electronic world. Ink from Ledeker's pen has reached across the United States, into the hands of Jerry Falwell, the evangelical pastor, and Stephen Jay Gould, the evolutionary biologist. Ledeker taught herself the technique of calligraphy after discovering it during college, and she turned it into a career when people she knew started asking her to do projects for them. 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"For a student trying to learn this, it's just like juggling four baseballs and jumping on a trampoline," she said. "It's like learning to write all over again." Now that she has the basics covered, it's time for the fun part. Ledeker dips the pen into the ink — she uses only dip pens, never fountain pens — and goes to work. Gone are the deliberate strokes of before; now she lets loose, working fast and free, her pen's motion as flowing and graceful as the letters that result. She presses and lifts her pen in a wavelike motion, spreading and narrowing the two tips of the nib to vary the widths of her lines. She adds touches that give the letters their character — strong bodies, wispy tails and curling serifs. She makes sure not to get too carried away, so her letters remain legible. "You have to be careful," she said. "It's like wearing too much jewelry." But Ledeker prefers to give her letters more personality than other, more consistent, calligraphers. Her work "I just have too much bubbling out, I guess," she said. Ledeker's clients over the years have ranged from famous national figures to local characters, and from huge corporations to world-renowned museums to KU departments and schools. Her concurrent jobs with the strip club and the Bible publisher made for an interesting scene at home. She would paint fishnet stockings and high heels on a 15-by-5-foot sign stretched between two poles in the hallway, while Bibles were piled high on the kitchen table and her daughters played nearby. "They thought nothing of it—just, 'Oh, Mom's painting something," she said. Among the names Ledeker inscribed in the Bibles was that of Jerry Falwell, the politically active evangelical preacher. Ledeker admitted she was less than thrilled to think of her work falling into Falwell's hands. During the 1990s, she made an award certificate for Stephen Jay Gould, the scientist and strong advocate of the theory of evolution. "I thought, 'Oh my, the life of an artist for hire.' Ledeker said. The award, from an association of biological specimen collectors, honored Gould for his biological research. When Ledeker makes a certificate, she doesn't just write the name of the award on some nice paper — a computer could do that. For Gould, she created a border out of a series of evolving wildlife images around the outside of the paper. Gould was so impressed by its beauty that he wrote to her. "I got this wonderful letter," she said. "He told me that he'd never hung anything on his office wall before, but he made an exception and hung that." USE IT OR LOSE IT! Your KU Cuisine Cash expires at the end of this sec She integrates drawings and art into the text, using images related to the person's accomplishments. Ledeker has produced similar certificates for directors at the Smithsonian Institute, the New York Museum of Natural History and the Royal Botanical Gardens in England. She also created a certificate as Robert Eaton, a KU graduate, former CEO of the Chrysler Corporation and namesake of Eaton Hall. Her impact The mark of Ledeker's hand can be found all over Lawrence as well. your next order when you present this coupon and use KU Cuisine Cash in the hallways of campus buildings, in the homes and offices of influential citizens and in the lives of disadvantaged youths. unadvantaged youths. Anyone who walks into the main entrances of JRP and Green Halls can see some of Ledeker's work hanging nearby. *offer only valid when paying with $U Cuisine Cash or Beak 'Em Bucks* *Not Valid with any other offer expires 6/1/07 $2.00 off She painted the ornamental borders and lettered the Gothic script on the "dean's club" signs for the School of Education and School of and Law. She made a similar border for the school of business that hangs in the dean's office at Summerfield Hall. "If you want an impressionistic watercolor, she can do that." Bosnak said. "If you want something that's a copy of something else, she can do that. If you want something whimsical, she can do that." Call Us! 841-8002 Visit Us! kudominos.com 9th & Iowa -- Sun-Thurs 11am-11pm Tom Groene can also attest to Ledeker's abilities. Groene won this year's Citizen of the Year award from the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, which Ledeker letters and illustrates each year. Kirsten Bosnak, senior editor for the endowment association, said Ledeker combines signature touches, like the swirling flowers, with a versatility that makes her useful. "I've done all variety of Jayhawks," Ledeker said. Groene said he would have hung Ledeker's certificate on his wall at home even if it didn't list all of his accomplishments, just so he could She has also produced bright and colorful scenes involving Jayhawks and campus sights for the mailers the association has sent to potential donors. monarch butterflies and sunflowers — have established design motifs for entire publications. All of the borders contain a motif of swirling, spiraling flowers — something Ledeker has also used in the work she has done for the Kansas University Endowment Association. Ledeker's illustrations — including mesmerizing images of flowers weaving in and out of each other and light, dreamy watercolor paintings of 9th & Iowa -- Sun-Thurs 11am-1am, Fri-Sat 11am-3am Call Us! 841-8002 admire its color and beauty. The certificate, about two feet by three feet, features shades of brown, blue, red and gold. Ledeker currently sharesher artistic talents with some of Lawrence's most needy, younger people as the art director for Van Go Mobile Arts, 715 New Jersey St. Van Go, a nonprofit agency, hires 14- to 21 year-olds — selected based on low family income, mental illness or problems at school — to create artwork that is sold or commissioned. Ledeker teaches them art skills. Lynne Green, Van Go executive director, said Ledeker was vital to Van Go's operation. Her tradition Even in everyday life, Ledeker writes everything by hand — she never types. "It's what you would hope any wonderful teacher would have: sort of the combination of high expectations and, yet, a very loving way," Green said. "It's the difference between the human touch and a machine," she said. "There's no substitute — the spontaneity, the control, the possibilities." “There’s something of the person in it that is missing when you don’t actually write it,” she said. “A signature is like a portrait of a person, and you may sign your name differently depending on what kind of a mood you’re in, or what kind of day you’ve had, or how much of a hurry you’re in.” Ledeker owns a computer, but it sat unused for about six weeks with a broken monitor before she got around to buying a new one. "Our school systems no longer teach handwriting to a large degree," he said. "It's considered almost superfluous now." But Ledeker isn't concerned about her lack of computer literacy — she's satisfied with her proficiency in penmanship. "I'm sort of disabled when it comes to using a computer," she said. Kansan staff writer Matt Erickson can be contacted at merickson@ kansan.com. Ledeker and other calligraphers bemoan the decline of penmanship — the art of handwriting — in American society as typing replaces handwriting in many areas of life. Recordkeeping and accounting were all done by hand, and as recently as the first half of the 20th century, entire colleges of penmanship trained students for careers in handwriting, he said. Penmanship was once a necessary and marketable business skill, said Joe Vitolo, a scholar and historian of penmanship who is also a professor at Marquette University's school of dentistry. But the spread of the typewriter in the early 20th century sounded the death knells for penmanship as a skill, Vitolo said. Edited by Mark Vierthaler Using a pen and ink, Ledeker attempts another calligraphy letter. When working on a project she'll practice and rewrite a project several times comparing one to another until she gets the right feel. Don't let finals get you down...Perk up with Perkins 1711 W.23rd St. | 842-9040 One coupon per person per visit at participating Perkins! Restaurant & Bakery. Not valid with any other discount or offer. Coupon valid if purchased, sold or borne for cash. Sales tax, if applicable, must be paid by customer. Please present coupon when ordering. Prices may vary in Canada. Printed in the U.S.A. [c] 2007 Perkins & Marie Callender's Inc. PTU* - open 24 hours - fast and free WiFi - unlimited coffee refills - we accept Beak Em Bucks