Introduction to Liu Fengjun

Liu Fengjun, male, nicknamed Longpeng, also known as Shentong Jushi. Born in Mengyin County, Shandong Province in 1952, he graduated from Peking University in 1978 and was assigned to teach at Shandong University after graduation. Mainly engaged in teaching and research of archeology, art history, ancient characters and calligraphy. He is currently the director of the Institute of Art Archeology of Shandong University, the director of the Institute of Calligraphy and Culture and the Institute of Bone Inscriptions of the School of History and Culture of Shandong University, professor and doctoral supervisor, and a distinguished professor of the School of Art of Shandong University. He is currently serving as a correspondence judge for the Doctoral Program in Art of the Academic Degrees Committee of the State Council, a peer review expert for the National Social Science Fund, a part-time professor at Lanzhou University, an executive director of the Chinese Ancient Ceramics Society, an art director of the Shandong Collectors Association, a senior painter at the Shandong Painting Academy, and an academic consultant for the Taiwan Han Guang Calligraphy Society. and academic advisor of Korea National Academy of Sciences, etc. The bone inscriptions he discovered in 2005 are the source of oracle bone inscriptions. He has published 4 monographs on bone inscriptions including "Bone Inscriptions". Authoritative media commented on Liu Fengjun: "Not only did he discover bone inscriptions, but he also clearly explained some relevant theoretical research on bone inscriptions." "The history of the development of Chinese characters is also Changes will occur. Liu Fengjun, the discoverer of bone inscriptions, is known as the contemporary Wang Yirong. He is also known as the "father of bone inscriptions." In 2001, his monograph "Introduction to Art Archeology" was rated as one of the 10 best works on Chinese cultural archeology in the 20th century. He was recognized by the academic community as the first person to create the theoretical system of Chinese art archeology. In 2002, he was awarded the title of "China Cultural Relics" The newspaper named him one of the top 100 famous cultural and archaeological experts in China. He is also the "contributor to the return of the four-door pagoda Buddha heads" in Jinan, the discoverer of the Chongshan Stone Ancestral Forest, the first researcher to authenticate the rock calligraphy of Shouyang Mountain and the proposer of the "Qingzhou style" Buddha statues. In 2004, he was hired as a famous contemporary Chinese calligrapher and painter by the State Council Agency Affairs Administration. In 2009, the California government of the United States awarded him a certificate of artistic honor. He has published more than 10 academic monographs and more than 100 academic papers, some of which have been translated into English, Japanese, Korean and other languages.