Huai Su's Hui Ci:
Cursive script is a font of Chinese characters, which is characterized by simple structure and continuous strokes. Formed in the Han Dynasty, it evolved on the basis of official script for the convenience of writing. There are Cao Zhang, modern grass and weeds, and it feels beautiful in madness.
Representative figures are Cui Yuan, Zhang Zhi, Zhang Xu and Huai Su.
"Shuo Wen Jie Zi" says: "There are cursive scripts in Han Xing". The cursive script began in the early Han dynasty, and its characteristics are: keeping the outline of characters, damaging the official rules, rushing away and rushing away quickly. Because of the meaning of grass, it is called cursive script.
Huai Su, born in Lingling, Yongzhou (now Lingling, Hunan), was a calligrapher in the Tang Dynasty. He is famous for "Weeds" and is known as the "sage in the grass" in history. Being a monk since childhood, I like calligraphy after meditation. And Zhang Xu, collectively referred to as "Dian Zhang Kuang vulgar".
Huai Su's cursive script is thin and vigorous, flying naturally, like a whirlwind of showers. Although his calligraphy is capricious and ever-changing, it has statutes. Huai Su and Zhang Xu formed two peaks of calligraphy in the Tang Dynasty, which were also two peaks in the history of cursive writing in China.