Shi Tao's calligraphy album "Eight Frames of The Original Ji Poetry Page", collected by the Palace Museum.
Yuan Ji (1642-1707), commonly known as Zhu. The name Ruoji, the word Shitao, the number of the big dizi, Guangxi Quanzhou people. A descendant of Zhu Shouqian, the king of Jingjiang in the Ming Dynasty, his father was hunted down and killed at the end of the Ming Dynasty, and when ruoji was five years old, he cut his hair and became a monk to survive. The Dharma name is Yuan ji, a yuan ji, who calls himself a bitter melon monk. Together with Hongren, Jia Ren, and Zhu Yun, they are called the "Four Monks". He has made outstanding contributions to painting theory. He advocated "pen and ink with the times" and "borrowing from the past to open up the present", emphasizing that we must have a real artistic feeling for nature, and that we should "use my own method" when creating art, and oppose the immutation of mud and ancients. It had a great influence on the later Yangzhou School of painting and modern painting style.
Former Jixing cursive Guangling under the tree composed poems
Original Jixing cursive inscription Xuejiang scroll poetry page
The original Ji Xingshu on the snow poetry page
Original Ji Xing Shu Guan Lotus Peak Poem
The original Jixing Book Jinshan Liuyun Pavilion singing and rhyme poem pages
The original Ji xing book praises the top page of the golden mountain
Hara wrote poems on the Nishizu Bridge
The original Ji XingShu was given to Weng Shan's poetry page