The meaning of wild grass

The meaning of Kuangcao is as follows:

Kangcao is the most indulgent type of cursive script. The strokes are connected and rounded, the fonts are wild and changeable, and dots and strokes are written continuously on the basis of modern cursive script. , forming a "one stroke of writing", which is in the same vein as Jincao in terms of composition. As Li Zhimin said: "Be present in the pond, learn from the principles, learn from things, get from the heart, understand from the image, and then enter the wonderful realm of cursive script."

In ancient Chinese calligraphy theory, whether it is Discussions on seal script, official script, official script, regular script, and cursive script mostly use natural landscapes or certain phenomena as comparisons to describe and describe them. Readers need to rely on a kind of life feeling and life experience to understand in order to appreciate and understand.

Quotations and explanations

1. The most indulgent type of cursive writing. The strokes are continuous and winding, and the fonts change a lot. According to legend, it was created by Zhang Zhi of the Han Dynasty and spread by Huai Su in the Tang Dynasty. Feng Ban of the Qing Dynasty's "Bi Yin Shu Yao": "Although he is as crazy as Xu Su, he is astonishing and wonderful. The ancients wrote wildly when they were drunk. If you look closely, you will not miss a single stroke, and your work is meticulous on weekdays." "lt; Zangzhen's preface" gt; Postscript": "Tang Huai's plain calligraphy is full of extraordinary changes and transcends ancient times. His autobiography in one volume is especially wildly written about his life."

2. Scribbling at will. Ba Jin's "Home" 25: "Judging from Qianru's Kuangcao handwriting, we can know how angry she is."

3. Kuangcao is a continuous writing of dots on the basis of Jincao to form " "One stroke of writing" is in the same vein as Jincao in terms of composition. The achievements of Kuangcao are another manifestation of the peak of calligraphy in the Tang Dynasty. The representative figures are Zhang Xu and Huai Su. Zhang Xu is known as the "Grass Saint" in history. Just as Li Zhimin, a professor at Peking University and the founder of the introduction of monuments to grass, commented: "Zhang Xu understood the strange state from 'The solitary peng vibrates and flies on the startled sand', and he also understood the low-spirited flying back from Gongsun Da Niang's sword dance. Like. He became a master of Kuangcao because of his mastery of nature.”