1. "Warlords" describes leaving the family and going to work as an official.
Stippling is vigorous and delicate, with coherent brushwork and sparse word spacing. It's neither as thick as Ganjiu Sticker nor as varicose as Duck Head Pill. This gesture seems to cost only three cents to make the strokes less fleshy. It is also square and broad, not tight, and its style is ancient and light. As far as strokes and postures are concerned, it should be a thin way.
2. "Duck Head Pill Post"
Wang Xianzhi's Duck Head Pill Post is his classic cursive masterpiece. This post has two lines 15. At present, the original has been lost, and the Shanghai Museum now only has a copy of the Tang Dynasty. Although there are only a dozen words in the whole post, the changeable features of Wang Xianzhi's calligraphy are reflected in these ten words, including Fang Bi, round pen, side front and hidden front. This post has both vigorous beauty and graceful beauty, that is, it is not bound by the law and embodies the law everywhere.
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Wang Xianzhi (344-386), born in Huiji, Yin Shan, is an official slave.
Calligrapher, poet, painter and official of the Eastern Jin Dynasty, the seventh son of Wang Xizhi, the son-in-law of Jin Sima Yi, and the father-in-law of Jin 'an Emperor Sima.