The cursive script is written like this:
Cursive script is characterized by ups and downs, dragons and snakes wandering; Hanging the wrist in the middle, dancing ink; The flow of nine clouds pulls out the potential, and God is idle and arrogant; Free and easy flow, in one go; Hanging rocks are closed and released into the sea; Flow method can be, talent endowment; The words are strange and the pulse is particularly smooth; Transfer between joints and bearings of flowing pen.
The cursive script was formed in the Han Dynasty, and evolved from the official script for the sake of simplicity. There are three kinds of cursive scripts: Cao Zhang, Modern Cao Cao and Crazy Cao Cao. His brushstrokes are regular, and his masterpiece is the urgent chapter of the Three Kingdoms Wu in Songjiang version.
Today's grass is eclectic and fluent, and its representative works include Wang Xizhi's "The First Moon" and Jin Dynasty's "Getting Time". Mad grass appeared in the Tang Dynasty, represented by Zhang Xu and Huai Su, and became an artistic creation completely divorced from practicality. The representative works of Mad Grass, such as Abdominal Pain by Zhang Xu in Tang Dynasty and Autobiographical Post by Huai Su, are all existing treasures.
Extended data:
There are rules to follow in the changes of strokes, such as the urgent chapter of the Three Kingdoms Wu in Songjiang Edition. Today's grass is eclectic and fluent, and its representative works include Wang Xizhi's "The First Moon" and Jin Dynasty's "Getting Time".
Mad grass appeared in the Tang Dynasty, represented by Zhang Xu and Huai Su, and its brushwork was wild and uninhibited, which became an artistic creation completely divorced from practicality. From then on, cursive script was only the works of calligraphers imitating Cao Zhang, Cao Jin and Kuangcao. The representative works of Weeds, such as Abdominal Pain by Zhang Xu in the Tang Dynasty and Autobiographical Postscript by Huai Su, are all existing treasures.