Who invented cursive script? Who didn't invent cursive script? At present, there are no documents and relics to explain which ancient people invented cursive script. It was formed in the early Han Dynasty and evolved on the basis of official script for the convenience of writing. It is recorded in Shuo Wen Jie Zi:? Hanxing has cursive script? . It has always been characterized by ups and downs, dragons and snakes escaping.
Cursive script can be divided into modern grass and chapter grass. Cao Zhang's brush strokes are still traceable, with a slight sense of brush strokes. Font is improved on the basis of seal script, and there are gaps between words, which are not connected together. Today's grass, divided into big grass and small grass, big grass, also known as weeds, appeared in the Tang Dynasty, eclectic and smooth. Wild and uninhibited, it is an artistic creation completely divorced from practicality. Representative works include stickers such as "The First Moon" by Wang Xizhi, which are still in the museum.
The cursive script is simple and beautiful, lyrical and freehand. The structure is generally simple and clear, and the strokes are also saved. Most of the details are omitted by Lian Bi, and the distortion is exaggerated, which can give full play to the temperament and make the writing more enjoyable. Sun wrote a preface to the Book of Music, saying, "Grass takes stippling as its emotion and turns it into shape? . "Can't grass become words? .
Cursive script is also practical at first, usually because of war or other emergencies. Because time is tight, there is not much time to write, and a cursive system has gradually formed. Later, it was improved and used by literati, forming today's style, which is completely different from before.
Cursive script, because of its freedom and few restrictions, is favored by literati to express their own temperament and different artistic styles. Because it gets rid of strict rules, calligraphy is more free, eclectic and full of vitality.
Interested friends can look at the evolution of China's calligraphy.