Ping Fu Tie is a cursive work created by Lu Ji, a writer and calligrapher in Jin Dynasty. It has nine lines and 84 words. It's a letter from Lu Ji to a friend who is ill and unable to recover. It is named after the word "I am afraid it will be difficult to calm down". It was written on hemp paper by the author with a bald pen, with euphemistic brushwork and simple style. Now it is collected in the Palace Museum in Beijing.
The writing age of Ping Fu Tie was 1700 years ago. It is the earliest and most authentic calligraphy post of famous western Jin dynasty, which occupies an important position in the history of Chinese calligraphy and has reference value for studying the changes of characters and calligraphy.
"Ping Fu Tie" is slender in structure, simple and straightforward in writing, scrawled and disorganized. It's a bit risky to be evasive. The last stroke of many words is also pulled down, which turns Cao Zhang's horizontal stroke into a vertical stroke, and the state of the words also changes according to the situation.
Luji
Lu Ji (26 1 year in 303) was born in Wuxian, Wu Jun (now Suzhou, Jiangsu). Writers and calligraphers in the Western Jin Dynasty. Wu county Lushi people, Sun Wu prime minister Lu Xun's grandson, the fourth son Afu. Together with his brother Lu Yun, he was also called "Erlu" and "Luoyang Sanjun" with Gu Rong and Lu Yun.
As a representative, his poetry and prose works such as A Gentleman's Journey and On Death are also good at calligraphy, and his Ping Fu Tie is the earliest authentic celebrity calligraphy in China.