Wujiang town calligraphy celebrity

During the Song and Zhou Dynasties, calligraphers came forth in large numbers, such as calligraphy, which was highly praised by Zhao Wei. He was once called into the palace to write down the word "learning morality". Evonne was amazed and praised repeatedly, so he was called "Dr. Xuanhe Calligraphy". Zhang Xiaoxiang is engaged in calligraphy and is good at cursive writing. Zhu called him "a man who wrote many words with an ancient pen". Zhang Xiaoxiang's nephew also studied calligraphy and studied under Mi Fei, but he learned from Chu Suiliang's brushwork and was especially good at Chinese characters. The existing books include Bao Ben An Ji, Shu Du Shi Juan, King Kong Paramita Jing, Hua Yan Jing and so on. Dai Zong wore ebony calligraphy in Ming Dynasty, and Dai Benxiao was good at official script in Qing Dynasty. At the end of the Qing Dynasty and the beginning of the Republic of China, Fan Peikai, a native of Wujiang, studied calligraphy with An, took the advantages of famous artists from Han, Wei, Tang and Song Dynasties, and became a family of his own, which was later discovered and admired by calligrapher Tang Tuo. In the second year of the Republic of China (19 13), he won the second place in the national calligraphy competition, and Ji Guang, Shenzhou had Fan Peikai's calligraphy monograph. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, calligraphers and calligraphy lovers traveled all over the city and countryside. Among them, Lin Sanzhi of Wujiang has made great achievements in the art of calligraphy, and is a master of the art of calligraphy in China, and is known as the "contemporary sage of grass". Representative works include the cursive script of Sino-Japanese friendship, the cursive script of Xu Yao and Huai Su, and the cursive script.