I. Zhang Xu
Zhang Xu (685? -759? ), the word Gao Bo, the word Ji Ming, was born in Wuxian County, Suzhou (now Suzhou, Jiangsu Province), a calligrapher in the Tang Dynasty, good at cursive writing and fond of drinking. He is called "Zhang Dian" by the world, "Wu Sizi" with Huai Su, "Wu Sizi" with He, Zhang and Bao Rong, and "drinking" with whom. His cursive script is similar to Li Bai's poems and songs.
Second, Huai Su.
Huai Su (737-799) was born in Lingling, Yongzhou (now Lingling, Hunan). Calligraphers in the Tang Dynasty were known as "weeds" and were called "grass saints" in history. Huai Su's cursive script is thin and vigorous, flying naturally, like a whirlwind of showers. Calligraphy is ever-changing, ever-changing and has statutes.
Extended data:
1, Zhang Xu cursive features
He is good at drawing nutrition from various sister arts. According to legend, he saw the princess arguing with her husband and got the meaning of cursive brushwork through preaching. Later, I saw Gong Sundaniang's sword-dancing device and realized the god of cursive brushwork.
Zhang Xu is a calligrapher with great personality. He used the impassioned Wild Grass to express his inner feelings-"Emotion, embarrassment, sadness, happiness, resentment, longing, drunkenness, boredom, injustice, and feelings in his heart should be expressed in cursive." The combination of stirring emotion and cursive script creates a natural and unpredictable weed perfectly, and also makes Chinese characters rise from practical writing to emotional sustenance.
2. The characteristics of Huai Su cursive script.
By observing the Qifeng in Xia Yun, Huai Su realized the wonderful method of cursive writing, and asked the famous artists at that time for advice, and calligraphy made great progress. He is good at using the center as a grass. "Suddenly there are three or five sounds, and there are thousands of words on the wall." Although he is arrogant and changeable, he is equipped with statutes.
Reference source: Baidu Encyclopedia -dianjanguangsu