Qin Gui (1090—1 155) was born in Jiangning (now Nanjing, Jiangsu). Born in Huangzhou (ancient county, now Yongfu, Guangxi). Treacherous court official in Southern Song Dynasty, the representative of the main peace faction, the head of the four major forces (the others are Han Yazhou, Shi and Jia Sidao). The real Qin Gui in history is a controversial figure with unknown literary achievements and political choices.
Although Qin Gui was a courtier, he wrote poems all over the world, and he was quite good at writing. Tao Shushi will say: "I can seal it and see the words' Jade Rabbit Spring' engraved on the pillar of Jinling Confucian Temple, which is also quite impressive." In the second year of Shaoxing (1 132), in May, Qin Gui called for the establishment of a Politburo, promoted himself, and led government affairs together with Zhai Ruwen, who participated in politics.
Qin Gui's Calligraphy
Qin Gui's calligraphy is very good. He writes neatly and steadily, and is good at seal script. Tao once saw the calligraphy "Jade Rabbit Spring" on the pillar of the Confucian Temple in Jinling, calling it "very impressive". Only the calligraphy rubbings Du Lin Tie and Bie Zhi Qin Tie collected by Zeng Hongfu in the Southern Song Dynasty exist in the world.
"Don't be diligent in posting" is a regular script with ten lines. Influenced by Huang Tingjian, a great calligrapher in the Northern Song Dynasty, his style and brushwork are stretched with a pen, and the structure in the upper right corner is steep, which coincides with the trend of Huang Zi's brushwork. However, Qin Gui's words in this article seem to lack the "radial" structure in which yellow characters converge in the middle palace and diverge around. Compared with the yellow characters, Zhonggong is more spacious, so it looks gentle, elegant and gentle.
Reference to the above content: Baidu Encyclopedia-Qin Gui