What are the biographical sketches of Chu Suiliang?
Chu Suiliang (596~659), a native of Qiantang, Zhejiang, was one of the four great calligraphers in the early Tang Dynasty. He was born into a noble family. When Emperor Taizong was in the reign of Emperor Taizong, he was promoted to the position of Secretary of the Secretariat, and became an important minister in the political arena of the Tang Dynasty after Wei Zhi. Gao Zongshi was once in charge of state affairs as the right assistant of Shangshu. In his later years, he was exiled to the southwest of Hanoi outside China and died in exile. Chu Suiliang is a master with aesthetic flavor. He is not only the creator of the regular script style in the early Tang Dynasty, but also the successor of the calligraphy style in the Jin Dynasty. His calligraphy has an ethereal state. He deliberately deals with every stroke and line, so that the lines he writes are full of life and have a flying aesthetic feeling. Among the four great calligraphers in the early Tang Dynasty, Chu Suiliang was good at combining with European brushwork. Fiona Fang has both skills and is more relaxed than his predecessor. Representative works include the Square Monument, Master Meng Monument, and the Preface of the Wild Goose Pagoda.