Which dynasty was Wang Xizhi from?

Wang Xizhi was a famous calligrapher in the Eastern Jin Dynasty. Wang Xizhi was born in a noble family in the Jin Dynasty, and his family had a very high status at that time. Wang Xizhi's grandfather was a businessman in the Western Jin Dynasty, and his father was a satrap in Huainan, and he was also one of the people who supported the imperial court's eastward crossing. In such a family that has been an official for generations, the literary atmosphere is also very strong. Wang Xizhi began to contact calligraphy when he was young.

Wang Xizhi is good at calligraphy. He is good at calligraphy, calligraphy, calligraphy and calligraphy. He learned body posture, imitated hands, learned from others' strengths, prepared his body, melted into one furnace, and got rid of the style of writing in Han and Wei dynasties, which had far-reaching influence. The style is peaceful and natural, the brushwork is euphemistic and subtle, and it is beautiful. In the history of calligraphy, he was called "Zhong Wang" with Zhong You and "Two Kings" with his son Wang Xianzhi.

A Brief Introduction of Wang Xizhi, a Great Calligrapher in Eastern Jin Dynasty;

Wang Xizhi, a Chinese character, was born in the Eastern Jin Dynasty. Because the official is a general of the right army, also known as Wang Youjun. He was an outstanding calligrapher in ancient China, and was called the "Book Sage". Generally speaking, his calligraphy is vigorous and beautiful, simple and exquisite, profound in truth, elegant and dignified, and a variety of seemingly contradictory artistic features meet and blend here, reaching a perfect state.

The ancients commented on his calligraphy and said, "Wang Xizhi's calligraphy is vigorous and powerful, such as the sky in Yue Long and the tiger lying on the phoenix. Therefore, it has been treasured for generations and always thought it was training. " Because of the long history, it is hard to believe that Wang Xizhi's original works have been handed down. What people see today is copied and filled by later generations, or it is tà from stone carvings.

The printed edition includes Preface to Lanting Collection, Fengju Post and Mourning Post, while the printed edition includes Le Yi Lun, Huang Ting Jing, Collection of Running Books, Preface to Holy Communion, Diamond Sutra and Seventeen cursive posts.