Calligraphy art form

Calligraphy art format is divided into the following formats:

1. Banner: Take the long Xuan paper works as the banner, fully fold in half (half or half fold), and straight books as the banner.

2. Couplets: Two opposite banners written in couplets, also called couplets, couplets or couplets.

3. nave: Banners with full paper or slightly smaller than full paper are hung on couplets separately or side by side.

4. Doufang: Cut rice paper into a genre of about eight quarts (about 1 square), which is called.

5. plaque: also known as horizontal shawl, banners are placed horizontally or engraved on wooden boards and hung on the wall.

6. Striped screen: Use nave, banners and other similar materials to write a group of works according to the length of the poem.

7. Fans: The size is fan-shaped, including round fans and folding fans. It can also be framed or rolled into a book.

8. Album: small works are bound and read, combined into a book, and expanded into a book, called an album. These contents are either coherent or established separately.

9. Handroll: it is also a horizontal axis, which is not convenient to hang. It is only suitable for stretching on the desk and rolling up after watching.

Detailed explanation of the format of calligraphy works

1. Doufang: a style of China's painting and calligraphy. It is square. Usually, four-foot rice paper is cut into two pieces, two feet high and two feet wide, or four-foot rice paper is cut into eight pieces, which is called "short film bucket" or "short film bucket". Dou Fang is a square work written vertically. Writing content is generally four to six lines.

3. Sankai: a style of China's calligraphy and painting. Rectangular, different sizes. If you cut four feet of rice paper into three parts, it is called four feet and three cuts. If you cut five feet of rice paper into three parts, it is called five feet and three cuts.

[13] Contrast painting: a painting and calligraphy style mounted in China. Usually two are hung in pairs. For example, calligraphy is called "word pair" or "couplet". There is a kind of "painting pair" in Ming and Qing Dynasties, which is two screens of equal size hanging in pairs. There is also nave's vertical axis painting hanging in the center of the hall, with "word pairs" on both sides, or the calligraphy with vertical axis hanging in the middle and "painting pairs" hanging on both sides.