Wang Yi's outstanding calligrapher
"There are books, and learning Tan has no cavity." This is a widely circulated sentence in Beijing at the beginning of last century. "Yao" refers to, of course, and "Tan" refers to the master of Peking Opera. Wang Yi is not only a high-ranking official in North Korea, but also a famous calligrapher in the ruling and opposition. Wang Yi's calligraphy is as popular and sought after as Tan Xinpei's singing. In banks, money houses, restaurants, teahouses, satin shops and foreign goods stores in Beijing, plaques and couplets are mostly written by Wang Yao, and many merchants are eager for Wang Yao's words: Beijing Xidan Tianyuan Sauce Garden has four screens, with a long history and a long history. Ruifuxiang, the hometown of silk and satin in old Beijing, and Qian Xiangyi plaque, the hometown of silk and satin in Tianjin, were also written by Wang Yi. After living in Qingdao, there are more people asking for books, and the plaques written are far better than when they were officials in Beijing. In the 1920s and 1930s, Wang Yi readily accepted the requests of island businessmen for book plaques, so he wrote most of the plaques of Qingdao firms. There are many stone carvings of Wang Yi in Laoshan Mountain, among which two plaques, Mingxia Cave and Tianhou Palace, are still there.