The cursive script of Zhushangtie is a quotation written by Huang Tingjian, a famous calligrapher in the Northern Song Dynasty, in Jinling (now Nanjing, Jiangsu) for Li Rendao, a friend of five generations. It is now in the Palace Museum in Beijing.
This book draws lessons from Huai Su's cursive brushwork, which is vertical and horizontal, magnificent, unique and unrestrained, especially showing the calligrapher's superb calligraphy skills.
Cursive attainments:
Huang Tingjian doesn't drink, and the grass is all in his head, so that he can use a pen. But his meditation and wonderful enlightenment, though rational, can also be opened and closed, gathered and closed, and entered the realm of writing.
And its pen, by contrast, is more calm and elegant, although ups and downs, but also can stay everywhere, stay everywhere. Huang Tingjian's "All Seated Posts" and other Buddhist cursive scripts are really wonderful.
Thus, Huang Tingjian created a new realm of China's cursive script.