What are the running script calligraphy works?

1, Preface to Lanting Collection. Preface to Lanting Collection was written in China Jin Dynasty (AD 353). Wang Xizhi, a book sage, wrote books and made friends at the foot of Zhu Lan Mountain in Shaoxing, Zhejiang Province, and wrote "the best running script in the world", also known as Preface to Lanting, Preface to He Lin, Preface to Lanting March 3, etc.

2. "Sacrificing the nephew". The manuscript of "Sacrificing My Nephew" is Yan Jiming's manuscript, which is a memorial to his nephew. * * * 23 lines, 234 words. This manuscript describes how Yan Gao Qing's father and son stood up and loyally opposed it during the Anshi Rebellion, so that "the father was trapped and the child died, and the nest turned upside down" brought justice into his heart. Throughout the pen, I feel like a tide, the calligraphy is magnificent, and the vertical pen is bold and unconstrained.

3, "Cold Food Post". This post is the masterpiece of Su Shi's running script. This is a poem to send a revival, and it is a sigh of life caused by Su Shi's relegation to Huangzhou for three years. The poem is desolate and affectionate, expressing Su Shi's melancholy and lonely mood at this time. The calligraphy of this poem is produced in this mood and situation. The whole calligraphy is full of ups and downs, radiant and unrestrained, and there is no shortage of pens.

4. In Yan. Yan Mingshan was written by Mi Fei in the Northern Song Dynasty. It is now in the Palace Museum in Beijing. "Yan Mingshan" is divided into three paragraphs: the first paragraph is thirty-nine running script words written by Mi Fei on the paper of Nantang Chengxin Hall; The second paragraph is the "mountain research map" drawn; The third paragraph is the inscription of Mi Youren, son of Mi Fei in Jin Dynasty, Wang Tingjun, nephew of Mi Fei, and Chen Hao, a painter in Qing Dynasty. "Yan" is ups and downs, free to write words, free from the shackles of predecessors' statutes, and express its natural interest.

5. "Several Sacrifices to Yellow". Several Pieces of Sacrifice to the Yellow Man is the calligraphy work of Su Shi, a calligrapher in the Northern Song Dynasty. Sacrifice to Yellow was written by Su Shi and his brother Su Zhe. This volume of calligraphy is refined, in and out of Jin and Tang dynasties, vigorous in brushwork, rigorous in structure, concise in pen and ink, moist in meaning, precise and lively, and it is one of Su Shi's fine calligraphy works.