Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional virtues - Who can represent the Zen aesthetics in China's traditional artistic spirit?

Who can represent the Zen aesthetics in China's traditional artistic spirit?

Zhou Yun can represent the Zen aesthetics in China's traditional artistic spirit.

No matter how noisy vanity fair is, it can't resist the beauty of indifference.

As a religious thought with China's local characteristics, Zen gradually formed and developed in the ideological journey between different cultures, which mainly experienced the process from Indian to China, from China to Asian countries such as Japan, and then from Japan to western countries such as Europe and America.

Historically, Zen originated from Indian Buddhism, but ideologically, China's Zen thought tradition sprouted more than 100 years ago.

The highest pursuit of Zen aesthetics is the realm of absolute freedom, which is essentially a life aesthetics that pursues freedom of life. That's abstract Let's give a popular example. I guess you haven't seen or heard of the best court love.

"Lanyin" is a Buddhist term, which pays attention to cause and effect and enlightenment. Compared with Lanyin, it is fruit, which can be said to understand cause and effect and find eternal happiness.

A blogger of a video website described this complicated Qing Dynasty drama as "easy to become a Buddha", and Uncle Oxygen liked the interpretation from this angle.

It does not stick to cliché s such as "marriage besieged city" and "man-eating feudal society", but focuses on the individual's understanding of the heart of the universe through inner introspection, which is the way out for Zen aesthetics to reach the realm of absolute freedom and can give fate a sense of relief.

Wang Wei's "Let the water stop me and watch Yun Qi" and Meng Haoran's "How wide the sky is, how close the trees are, how clear the water is, how close the moon is!" Other poems reflect the harmony between man and nature, the harmony between individual life and the universe, which is the ultimate realm pursued by Zen aesthetics.