First, the Eastern Jin Dynasty-Wang Xizhi's family "three strikes"
"Three wedding invitations" are Wang Xizhi's Sunny Snow Invitation, Wang Xianzhi's Mid-Autumn Invitation and Wang Xun's Yuan Bo Invitation. Emperor Qianlong of the Qing Dynasty loved calligraphy, so he set up a small warm pavilion with a floor space of less than 10 square meter next to his bedroom, and collected three famous posts representing the highest level of China's calligraphy art for him to watch at any time. Later, this pavilion was named "Sanxi Pavilion" by Emperor Qianlong himself, and the stickers in Fast Snow, Mid-Autumn Festival and Yuan Bo Post hidden in this pavilion were collectively called "Sanxi Post" by later generations.
Second, the Eastern Jin Dynasty-Wang Xizhi's Preface to the Lanting Pavilion
In April 353 A.D. (on the third day of March, the ninth year of Jin Yong, 1667 years ago), Wang Xizhi, who was then the folk history of Huiji, and 41 people, including friends Xie An and Sun Chuo, drank wine and wrote poems in Ji Ya, Lanting, Huiji, Yin Shan. Wang Xizhi compiled these poems into an episode, made a preface, described the swimming event, and expressed the inner feelings caused by it. This preface is Preface to Lanting Collection. And wrote "Preface to Lanting Collection".
Third, Tang-'Zhong Ni Tie'
This post is written in light ink but not thick, and it is a bald calligraphy. It rotates freely without any mistakes or stagnation. The upper and lower veins are clear, the structure is steady and solid, the pen is calm, the charm is smooth, the body is square and round, and it is charming and vigorous. It was written by Ou Yangxun in his later years, and it is a rare treasure. The paper version of Zhong Ni Monti tie is 25.5 cm long and 33.6 cm wide, which is now in the Liaoning Provincial Museum.
Fourth, don Yan Zhenqing's "Sacrificing a Nephew"
The eternal value of Sacrificing a Nephew lies in its frankness. It is a model of writing with sincere feelings and passion, regardless of work, unrestrained and arbitrary. It was once collected by Song Xuanhe's Neifu, Yuan, Xian Yushu, Ming, Qing, Xue, Wang and Qing Neifu, and is now in the National Palace Museum in Taipei.
Five, Tang Huaisu's "self-narrative stickers"
Self-Narrative Post is the longest work handed down by Huai Su, and it is also the representative work of cursive script in his later years. Wen Mingzhi wrote: "The collection of true books is like a monk entering a sanctuary, and madness is understandable." In the Ming Dynasty, An Qi called this post: "The color of ink paper is wonderful and moving, and the vertical and horizontal changes occurred at the beginning, which is mysterious." Paper, 28.3 cm long and 775 cm wide, *** 126 lines, 698 words. The book was collected in the Palace Museum in Taiwan in 777 AD.