What are the pavilion-style copybooks?

Pavilion-style copybooks include: four proverbs in regular script, proverbs in quiet lent, and official script back to the book.

"Pavilion Style" flourished in Ming and Qing Dynasties, and its representative Shen Du was a calligrapher in Ming Dynasty. He is good at seal script, official script, official script and calligraphy. Deeply appreciated by Judy, the founding father of the Ming Dynasty, she called it "I am Wang Xizhi", which was famous for a while and even a dead letter. Scholars are scrambling to follow suit, thus becoming a standard calligraphy style "pavilion".

Regular script "Four Proverbs" is the masterpiece of Shen Du's "Pavilion Style" calligraphy. Its brushwork is rigorous and rigorous, its brushwork is steady, and its posture is round, which shows exquisite skills and statutes of the Tang Dynasty.

"Pavilion style" is calligraphy, which pays attention to black, big, light and round. "Pavilion style" is characterized by black ink, neat and square, beautiful and standardized. Scholars and officials pay attention to the use of "pavilion style" when taking part in the imperial examination and writing the memorial.

These people have a certain calligraphy foundation, and it is impossible to write "pavilion" out of thin air. Shen Kuo's evaluation of pavilion style is more pertinent: Santing regular script can't be said to be neither refined nor beautiful, but to be perfect until death. The pavilion is exquisite and beautiful, which is the need of the scientific community and officialdom, but for calligraphers, the pavilion is not a work of calligraphy art.