The fonts written by Yan Zhenqing in the Tang Dynasty are vigorous, open and vigorous, and the font style of Yan Zhenqing, a calligrapher in the Tang Dynasty, is explained in detail. His calligraphy was a beginner of Chu Suiliang, and later he learned Zhang Xu's brushwork. His block letters are dignified and dignified, and the momentum is open. Running script is vigorous, Yu Bo. The ancient law is one of the changes, and it is called "Yan Di" internationally. Kang Youwei of Baisha and his Talk about Guang Yi and Zhou Shuang: "If the word' style' before Wei and Jin Dynasties refers to calligraphy, after Wei and Jin Dynasties, it turned to personal styles, such as' style',' Liu Ti' and' Zhao Ti', not three fonts, but only three different calligraphy styles." The eighth lecture in Lu's A Brief History of China Calligraphy (III): "Yan Zhenqing's calligraphy is mainly guided by Zhang Xu, inheriting the tradition of Wang Xizhi, learning the characteristics of the four schools in the early Tang Dynasty and absorbing the fresh nutrition of calligraphy in the Southern and Northern Dynasties. When studying, there are choices and choices. It is the creator of the new book style in the Tang Dynasty, called' Yan Ti'. "
Word decomposition
Yan's explanation Yan × face, face, face: face. Open your face. Face. Color. Smile. A crane sent a child's face. Color: pigment. Rich and colorful. Last name. Radical: page The explanation of body is the whole body of human and animals: body. Weight. Body temperature. Physical quality. Signs (abnormal changes found by doctors when examining patients). Physical quality. Appearance. Physical fitness (physique and energy). Sports. The body is in pieces. Part of the body: four bodies. Throw yourself on the ground. Thing itself or all: thing.