Calligraphy is a unique traditional art in China. Chinese characters in China were created by working people and began to be recorded by pictures. After thousands of years of development, it has evolved into today's writing.
Because our ancestors invented the brush, calligraphy came into being. Throughout the ages, Chinese characters were mainly written with a brush. As for other writing forms, such as hard pen and fingering calligraphy, their writing rules are not completely different from those of brush calligraphy, but they are basically the same.
Basic meaning:
On the surface, calligraphy refers to the statutes of writing. In life, the word calligraphy has the following meanings:
One is the pronoun of a written work or the collective name of all written works;
Second, an art category generally refers to the art of writing Chinese characters. Kang Youwei said in Guang Yi and Zhou Shuang: "Tang Yan is a structure, and Song and Shang Yi Qu", from which we can see that calligraphy in the Tang Dynasty pursued the highest and most rigorous statutes, and its calligraphy achievements were also the highest in the history of calligraphy.