Appreciation of Xu Boqing's Calligraphy

Xu Boqing (1926~20 10), male, Han nationality, from Wenzhou, Zhejiang Province, was a librarian of Shanghai Literature and History Research Institute before his death. Member of China Calligraphers Association, executive director of Shanghai Calligraphers Association, chairman of China Artists Association, member of Shanghai Federation of Literary and Art Circles, visiting professor of calligraphy major of Shanghai Normal University, honorary president of Zhejiang Zhoushan Painting and Calligraphy Institute, and tutor of modern famous calligrapher Bao Xianlun.

? Juvenile court training, beginners of Yan Tihe, slightly longer than attacking lower case, thanks to "Yue Tang lower case". After graduating from high school, he was admitted to Shanghai Academy of Fine Arts, where he studied painting and calligraphy as well as art and theory. The lower case is vigorous and graceful, with proper limit stippling, the pen is close to the face, the pen tip is broken, and there is a thin golden book flavor in the tall and straight place, which can be made as real as grass, full of momentum and strong charm. Since the 1950' s, he devoted himself to cursive writing, went in and out of Jin and Tang dynasties, adopted the method of "two kings", involved Zhang Xu and Huai Su in their own ways, and enjoyed Wang Yang at will. 1954- 1956 works were selected for the "China-China Calligraphy and Taoism Exhibition" sponsored by the Foreign Cultural Association and the All-Japan Calligraphy and Taoism Alliance for three times, and were included in the collection of works. Since 1979, his works have been exhibited at home and abroad for many times, published in professional newspapers and periodicals, and collected by domestic museums, memorial halls and Versailles Museum in France. Committed to calligraphy education. He has published Thirty-nine Poems by Xia Zhengnong, Poems by Xu Boqing and Children's Calligraphy. 198 1 First Prize of National Youth Art Works. 198 1 year, Li Qingzhao's poems were published by Yugoslavia. He also painted Chinese paintings, and 1954 won the first prize of the National Youth Art Works. Since the 1950s, he devoted himself to cursive writing, went in and out of the Jin and Tang Dynasties, adopted the method of "two kings", United Zhang Xu and Huai Su to do whatever they wanted, and gained freedom in Wang Yang. He has published more than a dozen calligraphy works, such as Ci by Xu Boqing, Ci by Li Qingzhao, and Copyright of Common Characters. He has won many national honors such as "the first prize of the National Youth Art Exhibition". He has published more than a dozen calligraphy works, such as Poems by Xu Boqing of Song Dynasty, Poems by Xu Boqing of Tang Dynasty, Poems by Li Qingzhao in Small Letters, Copyright of Common Characters, Thirty-eight Poems by Peasants, and recently published cursive copybook by Xu Boqing. [1] Mr. Shao Xi Momo entered the Shanghai Academy of Fine Arts from 1946 and has been engaged in calligraphy creation in Yuyuan Painting and Calligraphy Building since 1950s. He has studied books for more than 60 years, and his reputation has spread far and wide at home and abroad, especially in small letters, which are famous for their exquisiteness. In the 1970s, Shanghai Calligraphy and Painting Publishing House edited and published a set of copybooks of commonly used characters, of which the cursive script of 5000 words was written by Mr. Xu Boqing. Mr. Xu Boqing was born in a family of traditional Chinese medicine in Yandangshan, Wenzhou, Zhejiang. I loved calligraphy since I was a child, and I studied under famous artists such as Zhang Daqian and Xie. For a long time, he worked at his desk 10 hour every day, and typed more than 2 million words of Tales of Song People in small letters, which was praised by his teacher Xie as "the pen meaning of the Six Dynasties". Inspired by Wu Hufan, on the basis of Yan Ti, he devoted himself to studying Chu Suiliang and Thin Gold Ti. Xu Boqing's dedication to calligraphy has not changed all his life, and he is keen on calligraphy education. Many students he has taught in his life are hard to count, and many of them have become the backbone of today's book world. Xu Boqing's book "Children Learn Calligraphy" has a first print of 70,000 copies and has been reprinted continuously, which has influenced several generations. The copybooks of commonly used words have been printed for tens of millions.