Wang Xianzhi (calligrapher)

Tang Dynasty copy of 新婦地黃湯帖 by Wang Xianzhi

Wang Xianzhi (simplified Chinese: 王献之; traditional Chinese: 王獻之; pinyin: Wáng Xiànzhī; Wade–Giles: Wang Hsien-chih, 344–386), courtesy name Zijing (子敬), was a famous Chinese calligrapher of the Eastern Jin dynasty.

He was the seventh and youngest son of the famed Wang Xizhi. Wang inherited his father's talent for the art, although his siblings were all notable calligraphers. His style is more fluid than his father's, demonstrating a reaction against Wang Xizhi's calligraphy. Amongst his innovations is the one-stroke cursive script, which blends all characters in the writing in a single stroke. Until the Tang Dynasty his influence and reputation rivaled and even surpassed that of his father.

When he was young, his father, Wang Xizhi found his talent and started calligraphy since he was seven to eight years old. He used stacks of paper just to practice one pen holding movement. After five years, he finally started to write words. Wang Xianzhi, at that time, is still far away from his father's skill. However, he did not stop. He continued and practiced. He finally became as skilled as his father. His patience was highly remarked by modern people. Along with his father, he was eventually crowned as one of the Four Talented Calligraphers (四賢) in Chinese calligraphy.[1]

References

  1. "A Narrative on Calligraphy". Vincent's Calligraphy. Retrieved 2017-11-15.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.