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At the end of the Qing Dynasty, was there a calligrapher named (or Shi) Kui (or Kui)?
Should be called Hua Shikui, word: Chen Bi, who lived in Tianjin, was a juren in Guangxu period, and was once a cabinet minister and minister of war Zhang Jing. After the Revolution of 1911, he lived in seclusion and made a living by selling words. Calligraphy, learning from Yan Zhenqing, is vigorous and vigorous. He knows the ancient meaning, and he is clever and clumsy. By learning from others, he absorbed the rich brushstrokes of Zhuanli and Yan Zhenqing, Qian Nanyuan's bones and sense of strength, Su Dongpo's glyph structure, and the trembling brush of cursive script, and formed an artistic style of seeking beauty from the outside. With Meng Guanghui, Yan Xiu and Zhao Yuanli, they are also called the four great calligraphers in Guinness. The calligraphy works in this book are ill-fated in the use of pens. Their crossbows are like pines and cypresses, tall and straight, and each stroke comes from the center. They seek dexterity in strict statutes, fat but not bloated, thin but not delicate, light in weight, changeable in posture, clever in hiding, clever in containing clumsy, and a breath of books floats out. Hua Shikui wrote the words "Tianjin Quanyechang" on the plaque of the famous building Quanyechang in Tianjin!

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