Yes
There are two senior calligraphers whom Wang Xizhi, the "Sage of Calligraphy", most admires: one is Zhong Yao of Cao Wei, and the other is Zhang Zhi of Eastern Han Dynasty. He said: "My book is compared to Zhong and Zhang. Zhong should resist, or it can be said that it exceeds; Zhang Cao should be like a flying goose. However, Zhang is very skilled, and the water in the pool is exhausted. If I was asked to do this, I would not necessarily thank him." (See Sun Guoting's "Shu Pu") "Dan" means addiction or special hobby. Even Wang Xizhi lamented that he was not like this, which shows Zhang Zhi's love for calligraphy.
Zhang Zhi, whose birth year is unknown, died in the third year of Chuping (about 192 AD) of Emperor Xian of the Han Dynasty. His courtesy name was Boying. Han nationality, from Jiuquan, Dunhuang (now Jiuquan, Gansu). Calligrapher of the Eastern Han Dynasty. The son of Zhang Huan, one of the great ministers of the Sanming Dynasty in Liangzhou. Born into an official family. Zhang Zhi is good at cursive writing in cursive script. He changed the ancient cursive writing method of distinguishing characters and separating strokes into a new writing method that involves up and down and is full of changes. He is full of originality and had a great influence at the time. He is known as the sage of cursive writing. No ink traces of his calligraphy have been handed down to the world, and only his "August Tie" and other engraved inscriptions are included in the "Chunhua Pavilion Tie" of the Northern Song Dynasty.