Zhao Gou is good at calligraphy. He is good at truth, line and cursive script. His brushwork is free and easy, natural and smooth, and won the charm of Jin people. He is the author of Mo Hanzhi, and the ink handed down from ancient times is Luo Shenfu.
No matter from the overall layout or brushwork, Fu Yuefei has the charm and wisdom of Wang Xizhi's Preface to the Lanting Pavilion, and it can be integrated into it, forming its own style, showing the artistic style of "being different but unique", which is wonderful and smooth.
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Personally, Zhao Gou is actually an artist. He is proficient in poetry and prose, good at calligraphy and painting, and his interest has always been in pen and ink. He is an emperor who studies calligraphy very diligently. At first, he studied Huang Tingjian. Soon after he became king, he used Huang calligraphy, and later he used rice calligraphy. The book Fu Yue Fei Yi, written in the seventh year of Shaoxing (1 137), is a typical Mifei brushwork.
After studying the "two kings", his "Give Yue Fei a batch of scrolls" is an important symbol of the calligraphy style turning to the "two kings". He especially loved Preface to Lanting, "From Wei and Jin Dynasties to Six Dynasties, the brushwork was copied". He also distributed a large number of copied works to court ministers. Because of his position, his hobbies also influenced the book style of the Southern Song Dynasty.
Baidu Encyclopedia-Zhao Gou