LDR   05174nkm^^22006133a^4500
001        AA00001814_00001
005        20201019101344.0
006        m^^^^^o^^c^^^^^^^^
007        cr^^n^---ma^mp
008        201018d17111799xx^nnn^^^^^^^^o^^^^nchi^d
040        |a UkLSOA |c UkLSOA
242    0 |a Four screens |y English.
245 00 |a 行書詩四屏 |h [electronic resource] |y Chinese.
246 35 |i Added title page title: |a Xing shu shi si ping |y Chinese.
246 3    |i Alternate title: |a Four sheets of rubbings of calligraphy in cursive script |y English.
260        |a [China] : |b [unpublished rubbings], |c Qianlong, Qing = between 25 September 1711 and 7 February 1799.
300        |a 4 panels (rubbings)
500        |a VIAF (name authority) : Liu, Yong, 1719-1804 : URI http://viaf.org/viaf/31067122
500        |a VIAF (name authority) : Tiebao, 1752-1824 : URI http://viaf.org/viaf/66354496
506        |a [cc by-nc] This item is licensed with the Creative Commons Attribution, Non-Commercial License. This license lets others remix, tweak, and build upon this work non-commercially, as long as they credit the author and license their new creations under the identical terms.
520 3    |a Poems in cursive script, a set of four rubbings. Written by 4 M. Qing calligraphers: Liu Yong 劉墉 , Prince Chengqin 成親王 , Tie Bao 鐡保 , Weng Fanggang 翁方綱 . Qianlong, Qing.
533        |a Electronic reproduction. |b London : |c SOAS University of London, |c SOAS, University of London, |d 2020. |f (SOAS Digital Collections) |n Mode of access: World Wide Web. |n System requirements: Internet connectivity; Web browser software.
535 1    |a SOAS, University of London.
545        |a Liu Yong (simplified Chinese: 刘墉; traditional Chinese: 劉墉; pinyin: Liú Yōng; 1719–1804) was a Chinese politician and calligrapher. As a metropolitan graduate (Jinshi) during Emperor Qianlong's reign, he was appointed as Minister of Ritual Propriety and Minister of War. He was not only a knowledgeable scholar, but also an eloquent politician. Being proficient with Chinese classics and histories, he was especially good at the textology on the ancient Chinese. As an incorruptible official, he was devoted to working for the public interests and therefore stood high in public love and esteem. Besides, well-received in the Qing Dynasty, his writings and calligraphy works were mainly done in running script. He ranked the first among the four greatest calligraphers of the Qing Dynasty. ( -- Wayback Machine at https://web.archive.org/web/20090812235449/http://history.cultural-china.com/en/47History2730.html last visited 20201018)
545        |a Tie Bao 鐡保 was a calligrapher who lived from 1752-1824
545        |a Weng Fanggang (1733–1818), a native of Daxing, Zhili (southwest of present-day Beijing), courtesy names Zhengsan and Zhongxu, literary names Tanxi and Suzhai, earned the title of jinshi in the 17th year of the Qianlong reign (1752) and rose to the rank of Left Vice Minister of the Court of State Ceremonial. He named his studio Sumi zhai and Shimo lou, and was accomplished in prose and poetry, being appointed as Director of Education of Guangdong three times. He modelled on Yan Zhenqing, Ouyang Xun and Su Shi for his calligraphy and created many works in the clerical script. His fame in the art brought him on a par with Liu Yong, Liang Tongshu and Wang Wenzhi, and made him one of the Four Great Calligraphers of Mid-Qing along with Liu Yong, Prince Cheng (Yongxing) and Tiebao. He was also a connoisseur specialised in the study of bronze-and-stone, and often researched into famous model-books and stele rubbings, leaving behind a number of inscriptions and colophons of his findings. As an occasional seal carver, he made seals that evoked antiquity. His writings include Liang Han jinshi ji, Yuedong jinshi lüe, Han shijing canzi kao, Jianshan ding ming kao, etc. He once compiled the seal book Suomo Qin Han wadang wenzi yin from Liang Tashan’s works of seal carving. -- (Hong Kong. Leisure and Cultural Services Department. https://www.lcsd.gov.hk/CE/Museum/Arts/artportal/research/RES2018_42_WENG%20Fanggang_TC_EN.pdf last visited 20201018)
545        |a 翁方綱,直隸大興(今北京西南)人。1733–1818。字正三,一字忠敘,號覃溪、覃谿,晚號 蘇齋。書齋名號為蘇米齋、石墨樓。乾隆十七年(1752)進士,官至內閣大學士,左遷鴻臚寺 卿,曾三任廣東學政。工詩文。書學顏真卿、歐陽詢、蘇軾,有法度,並能隸書,與同時代的 劉墉、梁同書、王文治齊名,並稱「翁劉梁王」;又與劉墉、成親王永瑆、鐵保並稱「翁劉成 鐵」。善鑒賞,長於考證金石之學,對歷代著名碑帖考証題跋甚多。也能治印,姿趣入古。著 有《兩漢金石記》、《粵東金石略》、《漢石經殘字考》、《焦山鼎銘考》、《復初齋文集、詩集》、《石 洲詩話》等。另輯梁他山摹刻印成《縮摹秦漢瓦當文字印》一卷。-- (Hong Kong. Leisure and Cultural Services Department. https://www.lcsd.gov.hk/CE/Museum/Arts/artportal/research/RES2018_42_WENG%20Fanggang_TC_EN.pdf last visited 20201018)
648        |a 1711-1799.
650    0 |a Calligraphy.
650    0 |a Calligraphy, Chinese.
650    0 |a Calligraphy, Chinese |x Ming-Qing dynasties.
650        |a 书法.
650        |a 中国书法.
650        |a 清朝书法.
650        |a 書法.
650        |a 中國書法.
650        |a 清朝書法.
662        |a China. |2 Geonames
700 1    |a Liu, Yong, 1719-1804. |4 cll
700 1    |a 劉, 墉, 1719-1804.
700 1    |a Tiebao, 1752-1824. |4 cll
700 1    |a 鐡保, 1752-1824.
700 1    |a Weng, Fanggang, 1733-1818. |4 cll
700        |a (清) 翁方綱.
700        |a Prince Chengqin. |4 cll
700        |a (清) 成親王.
830    0 |a SOAS Digital Collections.
830    0 |a Art and Archaeology.
830    0 |a China Collection.
830    0 |a Chinese Rubbings.
852        |a GBR |b SDC |c Art and Archaeology
856 40 |u https://digital.soas.ac.uk/AA00001814/00001 |y Electronic Resource
992 04 |a http://digital.soas.ac.uk/content/AA/00/00/18/14/00001/00001_smallthm.jpg
997        |a Art and Archaeology


The record above was auto-generated from the METS file.