The essence of ancient cursive script is selected from Zhang Zhi, Wang Xizhi, Wang Xianzhi, Zhang Xu, Huai Su and Gao Xian. It inherits the classic cursive scripts of Huang Tingjian, Zhu Zhishan, Xu Wei, Huang Daozhou, Ni, Wang Duo and Fu Shan, as well as the cursive masterpieces such as Li Luotie and En Mingtie in Sakura Fujiwara, which almost include cursive scripts.
Zhang Zhi's No.1 Scholar Post (selected from Chunhua Pavilion Post)
Zhang Zhiqin's spirit of practicing calligraphy has become a historical story. Wei Heng's "Four-body Book" records: Zhang Zhi "Where clothes and silks are at home, you must write before you practice (boiling and dyeing);" Learn books in the pool, and the pool is exhausted. "Later generations called calligraphy" Linchi ",that is, from this.
There are few original works of Zhang Zhi's calligraphy. Only the Song Dynasty's Spring Pavilion Post contains two volumes and five posts by Zhang Zhi. Whether these are genuine or counterfeit products is controversial, and it is still difficult to draw a conclusion.
Wang Xizhi's cursive script "You Mu Tie"
Wang Xizhi (303-36 1), a Han nationality with few words, was originally from Linyi (now Shandong) and later moved to Yin Shan (now Shaoxing, Zhejiang). He was a general of the Right Army and a great calligrapher in the Eastern Jin Dynasty. He was honored as a "book saint" by later generations. His son Wang Xianzhi's handwriting is also very good. People call them "Two Kings", and another son, Wang Ningzhi, is a general of the right army, and is called "Wang Youjun" and "Wang Huiji".
Representative works include: Le Yi Lun in regular script, Huang Ting Jing, Seventeen Guas in cursive script, Gua for Aunt in Running Script, Gua for Quick Snow Clear, Gua for Mourning, Preface to Lanting in Running Script, etc. Intensive study of body posture, imitation of heart and pursuit of hand, learning from others' strengths, and casting in one furnace created a running script of "natural, rich in gods and the world", which was praised as "the sage of books" by later generations.