1, Yuan Bo Tie is the only original calligraphy handed down in the famous Eastern Jin Dynasty, and it is a model of early running script. It is listed as one of the "Top Ten Running Scripts in the World" and ranks fourth. It is now in the Palace Museum in Beijing.
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2. Mid-Autumn Post, also known as December Post, is a cursive masterpiece by Wang Xianzhi, a calligrapher in the Eastern Jin Dynasty. There are five lines and 32 words in the original text, and only three lines and 22 words are left after cutting off two lines, which are now in the Palace Museum in Beijing.
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3. Sunny Post on the Snow is known as "Twenty-eight Li Zhu" and "the first calligraphy book in the world", and it is also known as "three blessings" with Mid-Autumn Post and Yuan Bo Post. It is now in the National Palace Museum in Taipei.
4. The Thousand-Character Works is a wild grass work handed down from generation to generation by Song Huizong Evonne. Written in 1 1 12, it was his meticulous work when he was 40 years old. The book "Thousand-character cursive script" is written on the whole sketch of Un-yong Kim, which is more than three feet long. The brushwork is bold and unrestrained, unpredictable and spectacular.
It is a masterpiece of cursive script after Zhang Xu and Huai Su. Known as "Mo Bao of chinese odyssey", it is now in the Liaoning Provincial Museum.
5. Shu Su Tie is the work of Mi Fei, a calligrapher in the Northern Song Dynasty, and it was written in the third year of Yuanyou (1088). It consists of eight poems written by Mi Fei in Shu, which are about the travel notes and farewell works at that time.
6. Cold Food Post, also known as Huangzhou Cold Food Post, is the work of Su Shi, a writer in the Northern Song Dynasty. Full text 17 lines *** 129 words. It is a sigh of life caused by Su Shi's relegation to Huangzhou in the third year of Cold Food Festival. It is also known as the "third running script in the world" and is now in the National Palace Museum in Taipei.
7. The cursive script of Huai Su, a calligrapher in the Tang Dynasty, is a sketch of Huai Su's life and also records the poems presented by Yan Zhenqing, Zhang Wei and Dai Shulun. Known as "the best cursive script in the world", it is now collected in the National Palace Museum in Taipei.
8. The Manuscript for Sacrificing a Nephew, together with Preface to Lanting by Wang Xizhi in the Eastern Jin Dynasty and Huangzhou Cold Food Post by Su Shi in the Northern Song Dynasty, is called "the three major running scripts in the world" and is now in the National Palace Museum in Taipei.
9. Montitie in Zhong Ni is the work of Ou Yangxun, a calligrapher in the Tang Dynasty, with 78 words in total. It tells the story of Di Tie, which Confucius dreamed of, and represents the pinnacle of Ou Yangxun's achievements in running calligraphy. It is one of the top ten masterpieces handed down by China. Now it is collected in Liaoning Provincial Museum.
10, Preface to the Collection of Lanting was written by Wang Xizhi, a famous calligrapher and "book sage" in the Eastern Jin Dynasty. Written in 353 AD (the 9th year of Yonghe in the Eastern Jin Dynasty), it is about Wang Xizhi's meeting friends at the foot of Zhu Lan Mountain in Shaoxing, Zhejiang. The full text, with 28 lines and 324 words, is known as "the best calligraphy in the world" and has a lofty position in the history of calligraphy in China.