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Guizhuang's "Seven Absolute Poetry Scrolls of Cursive Writing" is written smoothly and quietly, and has quite a Jin style

author:East China Sea calligraphy and painting

Guizhuang (1613-1673), also known as Erli, Xuangong, Hengxuan, and self-proclaimed Guizang, Huihuihu, Hanging Bow, YuanGong, etc., was a native of Kunshan, Jiangsu. Calligrapher and painter and writer of the late Ming and early Qing dynasties. Gong poetry is scattered, good at painting bamboo and stone, especially proficient in calligraphy, and the wild grass skill is deeper, which people think is extraordinary. Contrary to Gu Yan's martial arts practice, it is not harmonious and vulgar, and it is sometimes called "Gui Qi Gu Wei".

Guizhuang's "Seven Absolute Poetry Scrolls of Cursive Writing" is written smoothly and quietly, and has quite a Jin style
Guizhuang's "Seven Absolute Poetry Scrolls of Cursive Writing" is written smoothly and quietly, and has quite a Jin style
Guizhuang's "Seven Absolute Poetry Scrolls of Cursive Writing" is written smoothly and quietly, and has quite a Jin style

Cursive Seven Absolute Poetry Scrolls, 140.1×64.5cm

Interpretation: The relics are like pillows in the ink pond, and Jiang Zuo also pushes the first class. The famous saying of salvation worries about the country's aspirations, and the translation is hidden by an art.

The "New Chronicle of Kunshan" claims that he worked on the various books of the body, and the works he made in his prime of life directly chased after the two Jins. This sketch is written smoothly and quietly, with a Jin style.