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What calligraphy works does the teahouse write?

Tea room is suitable for hanging calligraphy like Zen tea, indifferent to Zhi Ming, liberal arts, good as water, or hanging paintings like Meiju.

Tea-drinking culture and calligraphy grammar have always been a tradition of China people and need to be handed down from generation to generation. In the blending of these two cultures, our hearts seem to have been baptized and can be freed from the noise of the city.

Therefore, the decoration style of our teahouse should pursue a kind of quietness, a kind of decoration that can make us return to simplicity, and an artistic conception that can convey tranquility and far-reaching significance.

Most people who drink tea are elegant, have high taste and get rid of low taste. So when choosing calligraphy, remember to avoid kitsch.

The room where the tea party is held is called the teahouse, also called this seat, teahouse, or just this seat. There are niches and floor stoves in the teahouse. The location of the floor furnace determines the laying method of indoor floor mats, which began in the Tang Dynasty in China.

Teahouses in China began in the Tang Dynasty, which reached its peak and became famous all over the world. It is under this historical background that a group of poets and monks who were born in mountains and rivers began to understand and sublimate the tea culture in China, thus forming a unique cultural symbol of China characterized by tea ceremony, tea ceremony and tea art.

In the Song Dynasty, not only teahouses were placed in nature, but also some artworks capturing nature were placed on teahouses, which were called "four arts" together with flower arrangement, incense burning and painting hanging, and often appeared in various teahouses.

Feng Kebin, an expert in tea art in Ming Dynasty, put forward thirteen suggestions on tea tasting: doing nothing, being hospitable, sitting quietly, chanting, waving, wandering, getting up, waking up, offering clearly, being precise, knowing, enjoying and writing. The "net supply" and "fine house" mentioned in it refer to the placement of teahouses.