
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Rubbings of the Sheng-chiao hsu Stele
Wang Hsi-chih
- Date
- 12th century
- Medium
- Ink on paper
- Department
- Asian Art
- Institution
- Minneapolis Institute of Art
Wang Hsi-chih, one of the greatest calligraphers of all times, was undoubtedly the primary cultural prototype for the Ming literati. Wang came from an aristocratic family and preferred the company of Taoist and Buddhist monks to Confucian bureaucrats. A brilliant man of letters, he studied poetry, music, and calligraphy and sought the quietude of nature. Wang was a master of running script ( hsing-shu ) calligraphy. His innovative brush movements distinguished his work from the rigid and formal style of archaic clerical script. Wang's spontaneous, fluid writing served as the model for expressive calligraphy for centuries to come. The Sheng-chiao hsu tablet from which these rubbings were taken is a Buddhist essay written by Emperor T'ai-tsung in 648. It was reassembled entirely from characters written three centuries earlier by Wang Hsi-chih. Completed in 672, the tablet served as a standard model for Wang's calligraphy throughout succeeding centuries. China, Asia
The authoritative record is held by Minneapolis Institute of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Minneapolis Institute of Art and other institutions.

Rubbings of the Li Ssu-hsun
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Calligraphy in Kai-Shu Script
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Three Ancient Poems in Cursive Script
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Commentary on the Peach Blossom Spring
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Verse in Cursive Script
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Calligraphy in Running Grass Script
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Four Scrolls in Running Script
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Couplet in cursive script
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Memorial Stele for the Buddhist Master Daoyin (Ink Rubbings)
Art Institute of Chicago

Calligraphy in Running Style based on Wang Bo's Essay on Tengwang Pavilion
Cleveland Museum of Art

Four Poems: Calligraphy in Cursive Script (xingshu)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Poem by Wang Wei in the Cursive Script Style
Cleveland Museum of Art