Postscript of Mid-Autumn Festival, also known as Postscript of December, is a cursive work created by Wang Xianzhi, a calligrapher in the Eastern Jin Dynasty, and is now in the Palace Museum in Beijing.
"Mid-Autumn Post" was originally five lines and 32 words. Later, two lines were cut off, and now there are only three lines and 22 words left. Interpretation: Mid-Autumn Festival can no longer be returned to each other, that is, how the army of He Qing and others wins. Without money, there are seals, seals and postscripts of Dong Qichang, Xiang,, and others.
About the author:
Wang Xianzhi (344-386), a calligrapher in Jin Dynasty, was born in Linyi, Eastern Jin Dynasty, and the seventh son of Wang Xizhi. When I was a child, I studied calligraphy with my father Xi and Zhang Zhi. Calligraphy is exquisite, especially cursive. It dares to innovate and is not imprisoned by its father. He has made outstanding contributions to modern calligraphy and cursive script since Wei and Jin Dynasties, and is known as a "little saint" in the history of calligraphy.
Official to the secretariat, known as the "big order. Because they are good at integrity, behavior and cursive script, young children learn their father's calligraphy, followed by Zhang Zhi, and then change the system, so they become a family, just like their father, and are called "two kings". "