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Can Han Jian and Xingshu be integrated? Look at this very eye-catching work

Today I saw a particularly eye-catching piece.

This work is particularly attractive in form, and the form mentioned here is not the rules, but the temperament.

This work should belong to the Simple Book, but the penmanship in it has a lot of meaning.

In other words, this work of writing incorporates a lot of simple bookmanship.

Or rather, this work skillfully blends Han Jian with Xingshu.

Can Han Jian and Xingshu be integrated? Look at this very eye-catching work

Simple books usually have a sense of innocence and liveliness; while books usually have a smooth beauty.

What will be the result of the fusion of the two? Or rather, how the two should be organically integrated is better.

I think this piece gives the answer.

In terms of writing, this work uses a lot of simple brushwork expression of the simple book, but in terms of writing, it grafts this penmanship on the structure of the book, and then changes it on the side, the thickness is staggered, and the writing is frank and flexible.

Loved it!

The author is Zhang Chengyin, a teacher, who has read a book he wrote ("Introduction Guide to Chinese Cursive"), but he has not read it deeply, and he must read it well in return.

What do you think of this work?

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