Calligraphy without words
Calligraphy without words exists only in Japan. This school of calligraphy belongs to Zen calligraphy in Japan. It does not advocate artificial repeated practice, but is "unintentional" in writing, leaving all the troubles of secular things. Usually, a brush is used on paper with only one stroke and one circle, and it cannot be modified after painting, which reflects the spiritual state of the writer at that time. Usually, people who are spiritually perfect can draw a real "phase" and draw a circle to symbolize emptiness, legality, consciousness, elegance, strength and reality. All beings have the Buddha nature and express the absoluteness of truth, which reflects the unique aesthetic view of the Japanese under the influence of Zen. Proverbs, also known as Korean and Korean, are pinyin characters used by the Korean nation. In 1446, it was created by a group of scholars at the initiative of King Sejong, the fourth monarch of Lee's Korean Dynasty (1392-191) (reigned from 1418 to 145). Like Japanese pseudonym calligraphy, proverbs are also used in calligraphy.