Zhang Xu's works

Zhang Xu's works are as follows:

Zhang Xu cursive script refers to the cursive script written by Zhang Xu, a famous ancient calligrapher. Professor Peking University and pioneer Li Zhimin commented: "Zhang Xu cursive script is like a dragon, vigorous and elegant."

classical Chinese

"Zhang Xu cursive script, followed by Cui Miao and Yan Zhenqing. Yan Xu said: "At first, I saw the princess fighting for the road, and I got the meaning of brushwork. Later, I saw Gongsun's sword-dancing device, and I was fascinated. Xu drank a lot of cursive scripts, waved and shouted, and wrote in ink, which is called "Zhang Dian" by the world. When I woke up, I looked at myself and thought it was a miracle and could not be redeemed. Younger generations such as Ou, Yu, Chu and Xue may have different views. When they arrived in Zhang Changshi, there was no sound. "

Main work

Zhang Xu's cursive heart sutra was first seen in inscriptions, and Zhang Xu wrote it under the Heart Sutra of Tang Cao. Before this, there was a cursive heart sutra that Sun Ren, the magistrate of Ming Dynasty, moved from Baita Temple, and both cursive heart sutras were recorded in the inscriptions in Guanzhong.

His Heart Sutra, Stomach Pain Sticker and Thousand Words Broken Monument bet that "all Zhang Xu cursive scripts have no years", and said that "all the right three stones are in Anbeilin". Zhang Xu's cursive script Heart Sutra was first published in the tablet table of the forest of steles in the third year of the Republic of China (19 14), and its whereabouts are unknown since then.

Four posts of ancient poetry

Zhang Xu's cursive "Four Ancient Poems" has a horizontal length of 195.2 cm and a vertical height of 29.5 cm. The five-color cursive paper is collectively called "Four Ancient Poems". The first two songs were written by Liang's Oracle Inscriptions, and the last two songs were written by Xie Lingyun's For the Prince and The Four or Five Years under the Rock, which were inscribed by Dong Qichang and others.

"Four Ancient Poems" is an extremely precious material in Linchi books written by scholars in past dynasties, and it is also the only ink spread in Zhang Xu. Originally hidden in the Qing Palace, Pu Yi took it to Jilin and was captured by our army. At that time, it was handed over to the Northeast People's Government, and now it is collected in the Liaoning Provincial Museum.