The Inscription of Liquan in Jiucheng Palace is a regular calligraphy work written by Ou Yangxun Shudan in the sixth year of Zhenguan in Tang Dynasty (632). Existing in Shaanxi linyou county Museum.
Jiuchenggong Liquan inscription, slender structure, the middle palace tightened, open on all sides, left folded and right vertical, keeping the sun. The glyph is shaped with the trend, and the left and right structures are opposite. The upper and lower structures are narrow and wide, the shelves are stable and the weather is solemn. Its white cloth is uniform, and the word spacing and row spacing are sparse, which is the most accurate one among the nine palaces. The whole monument is full of blood and bare charm.
Extended data
The Inscription of Liquan in Jiucheng Palace is a masterpiece of Ou Yangxun in his later years. It has always been respected by scholars as an authentic regular script, and it has been praised as "the first regular script in the world" or "the first official book in the world" by later generations.
Li Quanming of Jiuchenggong belongs to thin and hard style. Its stippling is thicker than the thin gold body, thinner than the swallow body, and moderately fat and thin. Calligraphy pays attention to brushwork and is realized through "bone". Too fat is easy to have no bones, too thin bones are easy to "break", and moderate symmetry between fat and bones is more suitable for expressing pen power.
Baidu Encyclopedia-"Jiuchenggong Liquan Ming"