What are the representative figures and works of cursive script?

1, Huai Su Hall's "Autobiographical Notes" and "Autobiographical Notes" are biographical sketches of Huai Su, and also recorded poems presented by Yan Zhenqing, Zhang Wei, Dai Shulun and others. The whole article is crazy grass, pen and pen are in the middle, such as cone drawing sand table, vertical and horizontal oblique straight, no matter what; The whole volume emphasizes the continuous grass trend, turning up and down with the pen, jerking left and right, fluctuating, rapid, light and heavy, full of rules, strange changes and stirring spirit, which is the ultimate expression of cursive art.

2. Sun Tang's book spectrum

Pu Shu is the book theory of Sun, an outstanding calligrapher in the early Tang Dynasty. This 3700-word magnum opus is profound and rich in content, involving all important aspects of China's calligraphy. Its insights are incisive and original, revealing the essence of calligraphy art and many important laws. It has become a landmark work in the history of ancient calligraphy theory in China, marking the development of China's calligraphy into a brand-new brilliant stage.

3. Huang Tingjian's song "Li Bai reminisces about the past"

Li Bai's Memories of Time Past is the representative work of Huang Tingjian's cursive script in the Northern Song Dynasty. The whole volume is round, unrestrained, unrestrained, and the whole dragon and snake dance in one go.

4. Zhao's "cursive thousand words"

Thousands of Characters in Cursive Script is a cursive script written by Song Huizong Zhao Ji in the 4th year of Xuanhe in Northern Song Dynasty (A.D. 1 122). Written on a piece of white linen paper, the length is 1 1.72m, which is now in the Liaoning Provincial Museum. Cultural Relics Publishing House and Shanghai People's Fine Arts Publishing House each have photocopies.

5. Zhu Yunming's "Before and After Red Cliff Fu"

Fu before and after Chibi, also known as Two Poems on Chibi, is a running calligraphy work created by Zhao Mengfu, a calligrapher in Yuan Dynasty, in the fifth year of Dade in Yuan Dynasty (130 1). Now it is collected in the National Palace Museum in Taipei, China.