Joke Collection Website - Talk about mood - Famous calligraphers include so and so from the Tang Dynasty, so and so from the Song Dynasty, so and so from the Yuan Dynasty, and so and so from the Ming Dynasty.

Famous calligraphers include so and so from the Tang Dynasty, so and so from the Song Dynasty, so and so from the Yuan Dynasty, and so and so from the Ming Dynasty.

Tang Dynasty

Four families in the early Tang Dynasty:

Ouyang Xun ("Jiucheng Gong Li [li second tone] Quan Ming") is a model in regular script. In his later years, "Ouyang Xun" "Style"),

Yu Shinan (a model of regular script for "Confucius Temple Stele"),

Chu Suiliang (a family of his own),

Xue Ji (whose style of calligraphy is mostly derived from Chu Suiliang)

Regular script: Yan Zhenqing & Liu Gongquan

Yan Zhenqing: Yan style, "Yan Qinli Stele"; (running script)

Liu Gongquan: Liu style, "Xuanmi Pagoda" "Stele" "Stele of Shence's Army"

Cursive script: Zhang Xu & Huai Su (Crazy Zhang Zui Su)

Zhang Xu's "Four Posts on Ancient Poems" and "Tie on Belly Pain"

< p>Huai Su's "Autobiography Tie"

Five Dynasties and Two Song Dynasties

Five Dynasties

Yang Ningshi: "Madman Yang" "Leek Flower Tie" and "Fairy Living Tie" 》"Xiaretie" (cursive script)

Four schools in the Song Dynasty: (middle and late Northern Song Dynasty)

Cai Xiang: good at real calligraphy and regular script, "Luoyang Bridge Stele" and "Zijintang" "Ji" (authentic running script of "Self-written Poems Volume", first running script, then switching to cursive, and finally small cursive)

Su Shi: He is best at running script and regular script, and even better in running script, "Huangzhou Cold Food Poems"

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Huang Tingjian: good at running, cursive and regular script, "Songfeng Pavilion Poems" and "Zhushang Tie"

Mi Fu (fu 2): the highest achievement in running script, "Shu Su Tie" and "Tiao Tie" (tiao 2) Poems on the River"

The end of the Northern Song Dynasty

Zhao Ji, Emperor Huizong of the Song Dynasty: He can do both running, regular script and cursive script, and regular script created the "thin gold style"

Southern Song Dynasty

The calligraphy achievements of the Northern Song Dynasty are not as good as those of the Northern Song Dynasty. The more accomplished ones are: Zhao Gou, Lu You, Fan Chengda, Zhu Xi, Zhang Jizhi, Wu Ju (Ju Yi) and Wang Tingyun of the Jin Dynasty

Yuan

Zhao Mengfu (Fu III): Combining the strengths of various schools, he was capable of all styles, and was capable of both seal script, official script, regular script, and cursive script. He was especially good at regular script and Xing script. ("On the Passage of the Qin Dynasty", "Luo Shen Fu", "Miaoyan Temple" in small regular script) ["Poetry of Baotu Spring" and "Resignation on Return" in running script]

Xian Yushu: Good at regular script and cursive script, preferably cursive script. ["Laozi's Tao Te Ching" in regular script] ["Ma Huijun's Translucent Ancient Mirror Song" in large regular script] ["Postscript to Wang Yingjun's Picture of Bamboo and Withered Bamboo in Running Script"]

After the middle of the Yuan Dynasty, Yu Ji and Jie Xi Si, Ke Jiusi, Feng Zizhen, Yang Weizhen, Kang Lixisi (nao 2)

Ming Dynasty

Ming Dynasty and Song Dynasty

Song Ke: Gong Zhen , Xing, Cao and Zhang Cao are still Zhang Cao (learn from Huang Xiang's "Ji Jiu Zhang"). "" Seven-Character Quatrains

Song Zhen (sui IV): fine seal script, with few handed down works

Song Guang: good at cursive script, "Feng Ren Song Ci" and "Lin Tie Huai Su's Autobiography Tie" 》

Taige style: a calligraphy style used by the court, represented by: Shen Du and Shen Can

Mingzhong

Three heroes of the Wu family:

Zhu Yunming: Small regular script, Kuangcao

Wen Zhengming: The real official script has long cursive writing, even in small regular script. "Zhen Shang Zhai Ming"

Wang Chong: Xiaokai (died young)

Ming Dynasty

Chen Chun, Xu Wei

Dong Qichang and others Calligraphers in the late Ming and early Qing dynasties

In fact, calligraphers in the Wei, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties were quite important, and Wang Xizhi was there. . . Pick a few to talk about

Zhong Yao: the ancestor of official script, "Oath Form" and "Ji Zhi Biao", early regular script

Suo Jing: Good at Zhang Cao

< p>Lu Ji; good at cursive script

Wang Xizhi: The important contribution lies in cursive script and regular script. [Xiaokai "Le Yi Lun"] [cursive script "Feng Ju", "Sang Luan", "Kuai Xue Shi Qing"] ["Lanting Preface", "the best running script in the world"]

Wang Xianzhi: Wang Xizhi's Seventh Son , and is proficient in all styles, including cursive script, such as "Yatou Wan Tie", "Mid-Autumn Tie" and "Luo Shen Fu Jade Edition Thirteen Lines"

PS: = = I am just reviewing the history of Chinese art. . .