How to transition from regular script to running script? Asking for superior people?

Running script is a kind of calligraphy between regular script and cursive script. Zhang Xu, a calligrapher in the Tang Dynasty, said in Shu Duan: "Running script is a small fake of official script (regular script), which is simple and popular, so it is called running script." This shows that the running script is simple and easy to recognize, and the writing is smooth and lively. Therefore, running script is a very popular style in both practical and artistic fields. As we know, the strokes and structure of running script are changeable and random. According to the degree of "Jane", we call running script "running script", which is more regular and close to regular script; The reason why cursive script is called "cursive script" is because of the actual needs of chalk calligraphy. Here we mainly introduce "cursive script" and its writing method. Running script has obvious fluency compared with regular script, which is the result of fast writing speed and tangled strokes. This is also the characteristic of the running script itself. Generally speaking, the strokes of regular script are slow and steady, and the strength and speed of brush strokes on the blackboard have little change, and the strokes are incoherent, but the strokes are broken. However, the running script is fast and light, the weight and speed of the running script change greatly, and the strokes are obviously smooth. In the form of strokes, regular script is multi-folded, dignified, implicit in response and weak in rhythm; The running script is round and lively with a strong sense of rhythm. Structurally, the regular script is unified and the running script is colorful. Understanding these characteristics of running script is an important way to write a good chalk running script. As can be seen from the above analysis, regular script and running script exist relatively. From the perspective of practical writing, running script is changed on the basis of stippling, brushwork and structure of regular script (but it is by no means a simple connection of strokes in regular script, but has its own writing rules). Some people think that regular script is rigorous and rarely used, so it is better to learn running script directly. In their view, it seems that the running script is "scrawled", and it can be written at will from the beginning, or even scribbled at will, which is obviously wrong. The ancients believed that "words stand like standing, lines like walking, and grass like running." It means regular script, running script, cursive script. How can I get there if I can't stand? Therefore, before learning running script, we should practice some basic skills of regular script, such as proficiency in writing, stability of structure, and echo between strokes. Other people who study calligraphy are also at a loss when faced with a variety of running script lines. Even if I want to learn, I don't know where to start, so I think running script is too difficult! Indeed, for learners who lack standardization and strict training, the so-called running script (or "free style") they usually write is just a patchwork, or influenced by teachers, or similar to classmates, or "copied" from newspapers, magazines and advertising posters. Therefore, with a certain foundation of regular script, how to transition to the study of running script is an important issue. Since running script and regular script are interrelated, to some extent, we can also regard regular script as the basis of running script, so the basic rules such as brushwork, stroke form and structure of running script can be flexibly applied to running script. However, there is a substantial difference between running script and regular script, which is reflected in whether it is "smooth and convenient" That is to say, the running script also has corresponding word methods, and the running script of the same word often has a variety of writing methods, but once these writing methods are established, they are relatively stable. Therefore, in many running scripts, we summed up the general law of the transition from regular script to running script. One is to add "tick" and "pick" two "attachments" on the basis of some regular script strokes (this is caused by the rapid appearance of running script); The second is to reduce some regular script strokes and even change the stroke order of several regular script characters (this is for the need of tying lines). The third is to write the square strokes of regular script into circles (also for the convenience of tying lines), or to change some strokes of regular script into dots. Please look at the legend below. First, tick; Second, save strokes; Third, change the stroke order; Round and replace; The above three rules are all based on the winding, smooth and concise running script. "Tie the thread" is indispensable in the running script. As the name implies, "tie line" is an extremely thin line connecting two basic strokes, which is drawn from the front/back of the pen and must not be forcibly drawn out. This is a distraction. In other words, the basic strokes should be thick, and the lines should be thin (or not thin), so that the main strokes can stand out, the levels are clear, and the whole word can change and have a sense of rhythm. In addition, don't be too messy to avoid confusion. As for where to tie the thread and where not to tie the thread, we should sum it up from a lot of temporary study and not blindly expect it. Click to read more >>& gt