1, run the script
Save some pictures, change your posture and use your pen flexibly. It is a quick writing of regular script. It is said that it began at the end of Han Dynasty, and it is not as neat as regular script. Cursive writing is not sloppy. The most famous masterpiece is Preface to Lanting written by Wang Xizhi, a calligrapher in the Eastern Jin Dynasty.
2, cursive script
Simplify with a pen, stipple and change, and be smooth. Cao Zhang and Cao Jin are two categories representing two stages of cursive script development. Cao Zhang evolved from official script, and today's grass evolved from Cao Zhang. Today's grass is divided into big grass, small grass and walking grass.
3. Regular script
Fiona Fang is miscellaneous, with straight strokes and neat structure. Also known as original calligraphy, it is a modern calligraphy style in China since the late Han Dynasty and Wei and Jin Dynasties.
4. Official script
The font is flat and wide, the posture is horizontal and vertical, the strokes are symmetrical, the inside is tight and the outside is loose, the seal style is proper, and the clock seal is reasonable. Official script is a common solemn font in Chinese characters. Its writing effect is slightly flat, horizontal drawing is long, and straight drawing is short. It pays attention to "silkworm head and goose tail" and originated from. The Qin Dynasty reached its peak in the Eastern Han Dynasty, and the calligraphy circle was known as "Han Li Tang Kai".
5, seal script
Because of the shape and use, the body is round, the left is not left, the right is not right, the font is neat, the size is even, and writing is slow. Divided into big seals and small seals. Dazhuan was a common font before Qin Dynasty, and Xiaozhuan was the standard font of Qin after Qin Shihuang unified the six countries.
Calligraphy style
Refers to the different forms and differences of traditional writing fonts and glyphs. Generally speaking, the writing forms of Chinese characters are divided into five categories: seal script, official script, cursive script, running script and regular script, and each category can be subdivided.
The evolution of calligraphy style
Except for Oracle Bone Inscriptions, most of the ancient characters handed down from the pre-Qin period in China were carved on bronzes. Because bronzes are metal objects, they are called "bronzes" and "auspicious words".
Among the bronzes, Zhong Ding is the heaviest and largest in China, so it is also called "Zhong Dingwen". There are many kinds of bronzes, and there are hundreds of them, most of which are ritual vessels or sacrifices in ancestral temples. Archaeologists of epigraphy, such as Luo Zhenyu, Su, have different classifications.