The expressive force of stroke and line language and the use of pen skills. Mobilize your own understanding, pay attention to copying links, and absorb nutrition from classic works. The sense of rhythm is the vitality of artistic creation, and mastering the sense of rhythm can improve the quality of works.
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China's calligraphy is an ancient art of writing Chinese characters. From Oracle Bone Inscriptions, Shi Guwen and Jinwen, calligraphy has evolved into Da Zhuan, Xiao Zhuan and Li Shu, to cursive script, regular script and running script in the Eastern Han Dynasty and Wei and Jin Dynasties, and calligraphy has always exuded artistic charm. China's calligraphy is an original performance art of the Han nationality, which is known as: poetry without words, dancing without words; Painless paintings, silent music.
Chinese characters are an important factor in China's calligraphy, because China's calligraphy was produced and developed in China culture, and Chinese characters are one of the basic elements of China culture. Relying on Chinese characters is the main symbol that distinguishes China's calligraphy from other kinds of calligraphy.
Calligraphy is a unique art in China. Although the consciousness of calligraphy art only appeared at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, calligraphy art should be at the same time as the appearance of Chinese characters. The formation of Chinese characters has gone through a long historical period.
The materials found related to primitive Chinese characters are mainly descriptive symbols left by primitive society on pottery, but many linguists think that they are not characters, but only play a role in the production of primitive characters.
Most philologists believe that "the formation time of Chinese characters is probably not earlier than Xia Dynasty" and that "the complete writing system was formed in Xia and Shang Dynasties (about BC17th century)".
It is recognized by academic circles that the earliest materials of ancient Chinese characters are Oracle Bone Inscriptions and bronze inscriptions in the middle and late Shang Dynasty. From the perspective of calligraphy, these earliest Chinese characters already have many factors of formal beauty of calligraphy, such as beauty of lines, symmetry, variation, composition and style.
From the late Shang Dynasty to the unification of China by the Qin Dynasty, the general trend of the evolution of Chinese characters was from complexity to simplicity. This evolution is reflected in the evolution of fonts and glyphs. In the late Western Zhou Dynasty, the bronze inscriptions tended to be straight, and the folk cursive seal script developed to ancient plum in the Warring States period, which greatly weakened pictographs. However, the artistry of calligraphy has been enriched with the development of calligraphy.