Wang Dongsheng’s resume is as follows:
Wang Dongsheng, whose pen name is Hanshi Dongsheng. Male, Han nationality, born on November 8, 1962 in Baoji City, Shaanxi Province, graduated from Northwest Institute of Architectural Engineering (now Chang'an University), calligrapher, calligraphy theorist, calligraphy archaeologist, member of the Chinese Calligraphers Association, Chinese character archeology researcher, national First-level appraiser of ancient Chinese characters.
Han Shidongsheng is a rare contemporary scholar who focuses on the evolution of Chinese characters. He has made great contributions to the study of Chinese characters and has won many national awards (China Daily). He has published "Shiguwen" essays; laid the foundation for Pre-Qin calligraphy, which is the basis of calligraphy, discusses the literary and artistic achievements of "Qin Gongzhong"; he has written more than ten academic papers with strong repercussions, such as "The Seal of the First Emperor and Aesthetic Pursuit", "The Pottery Vase with Zhu Shu", and "The Era of Official Script".
Wang Dongsheng’s artistic achievements
In 1987, Wang Dongsheng wrote the 30,000-word "Explanation of the Inscriptions on the Tomb of Marquis Zeng Yizhong" (published by Cultural Relics Press) and it was collected by the Palace Museum; in 1989, he wrote about Baoji City Museum cultural relics archives, the originals were collected by the National Bronze Museum; officially entered the Chinese Calligraphy Association in 1996, won the national patent for the first creation of Chinese calligraphy, and won the Excellence Award in the New Century Art Competition, and was selected into the "World Chinese Calligraphy and Painting Works Collection" and entered the exhibition No. Excellent Award at the 1st National Scenic Couplet Exhibition.
In 2002, Wang Dongsheng created his own text types: Fu, Lu, Hericium longevity, Xi, Hericium wealth, Qi Jushou, Yi, Hundreds of Hericium longevity, Buddha, Tiger, Crane longevity, Dragon, Rat , rabbit, martial arts, horse, dance, eagle and other eighteen Chinese character calligraphy. In the same year, he set a record for writing Chinese characters and obtained a national patent. In 2003, his creation "Hericium Longevity" was collected by Mount Emei as a landmark calligraphy collection, and was also carved on rocks.