Pang Zhonghua's Introduction to Learning to Write Pen Characters

Pang Zhonghua's "Learning to Write Pen Words" (a classic copybook of Pang Zhonghua's hard pen calligraphy) (revised edition) tells the story that calligraphy art has a history of more than 2,000 years in China. The change and development of calligraphy art is closely related to writing tools. The figures in Yin Ruins used knives as tools, leaving obvious and deep marks on the Oracle Bone Inscriptions. Yin dipped in paint and wrote it on bamboo and silk. It is natural for the image of tadpoles to appear in the flow of pigments. Later generations wrote on paper with a brush, imitating tadpoles, and finally could not help but make a choice. Asians use a lot of purple, drawing tall and straight, and the Ming and Qing dynasties are the most prosperous. It is cheap and convenient to make. But Yang Hao can't produce this artistic effect. In a word, the influence of tools on product characteristics is very important. Artistic practice cannot refuse to inherit and draw lessons from. "Innovation" and "innovation". The experience of writing with a brush can be used as a reference for the art of writing with a brush and cannot be ignored. This thin pen copybook has vaguely made us feel this in terms of font structure and pen movement.