Calligraphy+anti-Japanese war stories+poetry couplets is a unique classroom teaching mode widely known by Zhang Jian in Yali Middle School and welcomed by teachers and students. Recently, Zhang Jian has his own "new action" in his busy schedule: he plans to create and write 100 sets of poetry couplets with the theme of promoting the spirit of the war of resistance against Japan in about four years, and plans to hold a personal book exhibition to attract students and teachers to "watch".
Learning calligraphy
Keep practicing "old vines and dead branches" for decades.
Zhang Jian in front of the reporter is always smiling, giving the impression that he is sincere and tenacious. Zhang Jian was born in a scholarly family in Pingjiang, Yueyang, and was immersed in calligraphy since he was a child.
"My father likes calligraphy, which has a subtle influence on me. I remember that every time I visited places of interest when I was a child, I would linger in front of the calligraphy plaque. " Zhang Jian said that under the influence of his father, he became fascinated with He's calligraphy when he was in junior high school, and copying became his first choice in his spare time. From middle school, I used my spare time to copy alone. When I got to college, I copied with like-minded companions. Calligraphy became a hobby that Zhang Jian could not give up when he grew up.
1983, Zhang Jian graduated from Yueyang Normal University majoring in physics and returned to his hometown of Pingjiang to teach. This year was 10. Later, Zhang Jian was transferred to Changsha Yali Middle School. From being an audio-visual teacher at the beginning to offering calligraphy elective courses on 20 12, Zhang Jian stepped onto the calligraphy teaching platform of Yali Middle School as a calligraphy teacher. "Before I became a calligraphy teacher, I was lucky enough to be a librarian in the school library for a while. The calligraphy books and periodicals in the library have made me a treasure. I soak in the library every day and absorb the essence of other people's calligraphy in reading. "Zhang Jian's calligraphy road is getting wider and wider, and Mrs. Wei's calligraphy theory has a great influence on him." That's when I happened to see Mr. Wei's calligraphy theory in an art magazine. Her dots are like falling rocks, her lines are like long live vines, and her ink is like a thousand miles of clouds, which makes her calligraphy vivid and charming. Under the influence of Mrs. Wei calligraphy theory, Zhang Jian gradually formed his own calligraphy style of "old vines and dead branches".