This word comes from "Quick Snow and Clear Tie". "Quick Snow and Clear Tie" is a letter in which Wang Xizhi wrote about his happy mood and greetings to relatives and friends when the heavy snow began to clear. The full text is written in running script, with only 4 lines and 28 characters.
There is still controversy over whether this volume of "Kuaixue Shiqing Tie" is the original work of Wang Xizhi. This post was considered to be Wang Xizhi's ink in the Northern Song Dynasty and was recorded as an ink in "Xuanhe Shupu". Connoisseurs such as Zhao Mengfu of the Yuan Dynasty also believed that this calligraphy "is a foreign object that is more than a thousand years old." However, most academic circles today believe that this calligraphy is a fine copy from the Tang Dynasty.
Creative background:
In his later years, Wang Xizhi resolutely resigned from his position and pursued a secluded and natural life. This also made his calligraphy art the best way to express and express his personal temperament. a medium. His calligraphy style presents an elegant and delicate sophistication, and maintains rigorous standards.
However, he was able to use his pen beautifully and vigorously, showing his natural and straightforward character. Even his fragments of words or short paper letters have been preserved by future generations and have become a model for the study of calligraphy art in the past. . Such is the case in "Tie of Clear Snow and Clearing", which is a greeting letter written by Wang Xizhi to his friend "Zhanghou of Shanyin" around the time when the heavy snow cleared.