Appreciation of Fu Shan's cursive script Qian Zi Wen in Qing Dynasty in Shanxi Provincial Museum. A thousand words in cursive script is a cursive script presented by Fu Shan to Dai Fengzhong. This word is also mixed with a lot of "two kings" brushwork. The elegance and exquisiteness in this "two kings" post are integrated with its majestic momentum, and elegance is more than boldness.
The opening of this book is concise and elegant, although it is sideways, but it is more down-to-earth and appropriate. If you come out slowly, it is also meaningful in cursive script. Fu Shan was a Taoist thinker, calligrapher and physician during the Ming and Qing Dynasties. The first name is Chen Ding, the word green bamboo, and the word green owner has been changed. There are aliases such as Zhenshan, Zhuo Weng and Shen Shi, Han nationality, from Taiyuan, Shanxi.
Fu Shan spoke highly of Zhuangzi's studies, especially Zhuangzi's. Later, he joined Taoism, calling himself a disciple of Laozi and Zhuangzi, and consciously inherited the ideological and cultural traditions of Taoism. He studied and expounded the propositions of Laozi and Zhuangzi, such as "Taoism is natural", "governing by doing nothing", "whether there is a beginning" and "hiding without hiding", and developed the traditional Taoist thought.
Fu Shan said to himself, "In the winter of your company, I moved from Fenzhou to the Land Pavilion, and my luggage was only" South China Classic ",which was always in front of me." He once wrote Zhuangzi's articles, such as Happy Travel, Human Life, Foreign Things and Zeyang, in small letters.
Gu is convinced of his ambition. He knows everything about learning, besides classics and history, he is also familiar with the pre-Qin philosophers and is good at calligraphy and painting medicine. He is the author of "Frosty Red Little Students Collection" and so on. He was regarded as a model figure in safeguarding national unity in the late Ming and early Qing Dynasties.
Together with Gu, Huang Zongxi, Wang Fuzhi, Li Qing and Yan Yuan, Liang Qichao called them "six great masters in the early Qing Dynasty". He wrote "Gynecology in Fu Qingzhu" and "Andrology in Fu Qingzhu", which were handed down from generation to generation and were known as "medical sages" at that time.