What is the style of the pavilion?
Pavilion style, also known as Taige style, refers to the commonly used fonts in the examination room formed by the imperial examination system, which appeared as early as the Song Dynasty. It is a square, smooth, black and even official script, which flourished in the Ming and Qing Dynasties. Shen Du, a bachelor's lecturer in imperial academy during Yongle period of Ming Dynasty, won the appreciation of Judy, the founding father of Ming Dynasty, because of his elegant and exquisite calligraphy style, which made him famous in the government and even a paper document. Where there is goodness, there is no goodness. Scholars are scrambling to follow suit and become the standard calligraphy style. By the time of Kangxi in Qing Dynasty, saints loved Dong Qichang's calligraphy; During the Qianlong period, the emperor admired Zhao Mengfu's calligraphy, so the calligraphy styles of Zhao and Dong increased greatly. The mainstream calligraphy style respects Zhao and Dong as models, and its calligraphy is characterized by regularity and harmony, which makes the style of the pavilion more round and beautiful. The imperial examination in Qing dynasty was more important than that in Ming dynasty, and it required Ukrainian, square, bright and big. On the one hand, it can reflect the beauty of broad weather and magnificent brushwork, on the other hand, it is difficult to avoid the disadvantages of sameness and agarwood. At that time, the scholar's library spirit was only the initial effort to settle down, and calligraphy was his lifelong pursuit. Therefore, calligraphy is constantly integrated into its own characteristics on the basis of pavilion style, which is the general law of traditional literati customary law. Do you see any pavilion-style works on the craftsman art website?