Appreciation of Liu Ti's Regular Script Works
Selected pictures of Liu's regular script calligraphy works 1
Selected works of Liu's regular script calligraphy Figure 2
Selected works of Liu's regular script calligraphy Figure 3
Selected works of Liu's regular script calligraphy Figure 4
Liu Gongquan's Personal Profile
Liu Gongquan (778 -865), a famous calligrapher, was born in Jing Zhao Jing Yuan (now Yao County, Shaanxi Province) in the Tang Dynasty. Liu Gongquan is studious, good at ci and fu, and knows the rhythm. Officially known as Prince Shao Shi? What about Liu? . After Liu Gongquan sealed Hedong County, it was also called? Liu Hedong? . Public power is Yan Zhenqing's successor, but it is only a thin brushwork and unique; What will happen to future generations? Yan Liu? He also said that he has become a model of calligraphy in past dynasties. Wang Xizhi, a beginner in calligraphy, later visited a famous calligrapher in the Tang Dynasty and thought that Yan Zhenqing and his calligraphy were the best, so he absorbed the strengths of Yan He 'ou, formed his own Liu style between the charm of Jin people and Yan Shu's graceful and unconstrained style, and was good at health. Yan gu? The reputation of. He wrote many works in his life, mainly including Hui Yuan's View of the Bell Tower in the Tang Dynasty, Diamond Sutra Engraving, Xuanta Monument, Su Feng Monument, Shence Army Monument and so on. In addition, there are ink marks such as "Zhao Meng Post" and "Pear Post and Postscript from Wang Xianzhi".
Writing skills of regular script
In the long-term development, China's calligraphy has formed a set of extremely rich brushwork skills, and each stroke has its own special terms and connotations. There are many ways to write regular script, such as grabbing pen, grabbing pen, squatting pen, frustrating pen, rolling pen, folding pen, turning pen, turning pen, twisting pen, walking pen, standing pen and so on.
Grabbing pen: refers to a preparatory action before writing. In this action, the pen tip should not fall off the paper before writing.
Stroke: refers to the elastic pen falling vertically under the pressure of the nib, reaching a certain depth, and laying on the paper without interruption after forming a stroke. The strength of the pen should be appropriate. If it is too heavy, it will be fat if you spread it too much with a pen for a long time.
Squatting pen: Holding a pen is like holding a pen, but the strength is lighter than holding a pen, and holding a pen is faster than holding a pen on time.
Writing: refers to lifting the pen slightly after stopping writing, so that the pen tip rotates slightly away from the stop. Mostly used at stroke turning points.
Pen: the nib goes away and goes back.
Folding pen: refers to the pen tip up or down, or left or right. The folded front can be square or round. The square edge appears in the square fold, and the round fold does not show the front and becomes a round fold.
Turn the pen: refers to the swing of the pen tip. When turning, the Tibetan front does not show edges and corners, and it does not show strokes.
Flip pen: refers to turning the pen tip to the second pen, from horizontal painting to vertical painting, before the first pen is finished.
Wrinkle: refers to the distortion of the nib.
Line pen: a pen that points forward.
Stay in the pen: don't mention it, don't turn it, don't move it, put the pen on the paper and stop to gain momentum.