Song Huizong's thin gold calligraphy works

Song Huizong's thin gold calligraphy works are as follows:

The representative work of Song Huizong's thin gold calligraphy is "Hou Fang Poems". This work is extremely rare among Song Huizong's handed down ink writings. Large-character regular script, two characters per line, 20 lines per line.

The long scroll of Song Fang's Poems and Postscripts by Zhao Ji, Emperor Huizong of the Song Dynasty. Learn thin gold calligraphy. If you learn this long scroll, you will understand more than half of it. Every word in this work is extremely delicate. Although the strokes are thin, they are like carving with an ax and a knife. The movements of each stroke can be clearly seen. The hidden edges, exposed edges, turns and frustrations are all exquisite. The body is even more beautiful. The biggest feature of the "thin gold body" is that the "snap stroke" is extremely obvious.

Among the more than 800 emperors in Chinese history, Song Huizong Zhao Ji should be the one with the highest artistic talent. He was capable of playing, playing, and singing, and was extremely skilled in calligraphy, painting, singing, and poetry. Good at. By the way, he is also good at playing football. It is estimated that in the current national team, he should be able to turn the tide.

Of course, among all his artistic talents, the most powerful is his calligraphy. His calligraphy is known as "thin gold style" and is unparalleled.

The monogram on his paintings and calligraphy is similar to an elongated word "天", which is said to symbolize "one person in the world".

He is a rare artistic all-rounder in Chinese history. His calligraphy is "bending iron and cutting metal". Later generations rated him as "Song Huizong can do everything, but he cannot be the king's ear." This means that he can do anything, except being an emperor.