Written in 1 and Jiaqing three years (1798), the three-character couplet "If you aim at the Tao, you will succeed." In the fourth year of Jiaqing (1799), he wrote a five-character couplet, "Clear light is suitable for bamboo, and elegance is better than listening to the piano." In the eighth year of Jiaqing (1803), the five-character couplet wrote: "The political voice is the official department, and the righteousness is the capital of Dongjiang." The five-character couplet written in the ninth year of Jiaqing (1804) is "never more ancient, but can be endowed with new poems." The four-character couplet written in the tenth year of Jiaqing (1805) is "changing temperament and cultivating spirit."
2. The five-character couplets collected by the Capital Museum and published in the Catalogue of Ancient Paintings and Calligraphy in China, and the seven-character couplets presented to Yuan Yuan, Jiu Ge's couplets, Love Far, Refinement and Taoism, published in the Complete Works of China Calligraphy and Taoism, and so on.
3. In addition to couplets, his official calligraphy works handed down from generation to generation include Ji Xing Axis of the Book of Jin published by Japan's Comprehensive Dictionary of Calligraphy and Taoism, Ji Xing Axis of Shu Wei published by Japan's Illustration of Calligraphy and Taoism in Ming and Qing Dynasties, and The Complete Works of China's Calligraphy and Taoism collected by Kyoto Museum in Japan.
Yi Bingshou's Calligraphy Achievements;
Yi Bingshou's achievements in calligraphy have long been conclusive and spread widely. Many publishers have published his calligraphy posts since the Republic of China. From all the couplets, it can be seen that critics in ancient and modern times are obviously good at writing official script, and most of their official script works are strict, strange, broad and arbitrary.
Yi Bingshou was a good calligrapher before his death. He likes painting, seal cutting and poetry. Yi Lishu has a distinct personality, straight strokes, even distribution, full sides and strict rules, and has a strong interest in decorative arts, without the habit of "swallowtail with silkworm head" in the late period.
This official calligraphy association has strict central strokes, hides the head and protects the tail, and the strokes are roughly equal in thickness. Round and straightforward, it is obviously an original seal and brush strokes. This knot is balanced left and right. His official script makes good use of thick ink, which is soft and deep as paint, and his strokes are smooth and accurate. These five words are combined into one, with vigorous brushwork and heavy Chinese painting, which combines the advantages of Han Li's famous monuments such as Ode to a Pavilion, Zhang Qianbei and Fang Heng Monument, and forms its own rigorous but not rigid, dignified and rhythmic, exaggerated and reasonable official script.
Reference to the above content: Baidu Encyclopedia-Yi Bingshou