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Guo Zhongshu

Guo Zhongshu, courtesy name Shuxian, was a Chinese calligrapher, painter, philologist, and scholar during the Five Dynasties period and Song dynasty. He was noted for his paintings of landscapes and structures.

Early life
'' (明皇避暑宮), collection of Osaka City Museum of Fine Arts. Guo Zhongshu was from Luoyang, while his ancestral home was in Shanghe County. (The exam was for children under 15 who could recite Classics and compose poetry in both the shi and fu forms, recommended by the prefect and personally tested by the emperor.) He was also good at calligraphy, especially the seal script and the large seal script. Once, when shown a manuscript in the rare bird seal script, he was so absorbed by it that he read and copied it overnight. During the Later Han dynasty, Liu Yun—a cousin of the Later Han emperor Liu Chengyou—was named the military governor of Wuning Circuit (武寧, headquartered in Xu Prefecture) in 948. Guo Zhongshu, who was around 19 at that time, went to Xu Prefecture and served as a prefectural judge () under him. Realizing this is a conspiracy, the 22-year-old Guo Zhongshu angrily lambasted the 69-year-old Feng Dao, who had disloyally held high positions under the Later Tang, Later Jin, and the Liao dynasty before Later Han: (Su Shi's eulogy (included in his Dongpo Ji 東坡集) offers a different account. It states that Guo Zhongshu resigned from his post before 950, following a quarrel with Dong Yi (), a staff supervisor ().) ==Later Zhou and Song dynasties==
Later Zhou and Song dynasties
. Guo Zhongshu re-emerged in officialdom when Guo Wei was still emperor. He likely denied his former relationship with Liu Yun, because official records claimed he "swung his sleeve and spurned" Liu Yun when the latter offered him a position. At any rate, around 952, he had concurrent positions in the Imperial Clan Court and the Directorate of Education (where he was the I Ching specialist). but he did not mend his ways there. After he drunkenly beat up a local clerk named Fan Di () and failed to report for duty, he was arrested and further banished to Lingwu. Zhao Guangyi became the emperor in 976, and being a connoisseur he summoned Guo Zhongshu back to the imperial court and provided him with sumptuous gifts such as silver belts. Ending his 15-year exile, Guo Zhongshu returned to the Directorate of Education to assume the position of master of records (). Initially the emperor had him stay with a eunuch named Dou Shenxing (). Guo Zhongshu had a long lush beard, but suddenly he shaved it all off. Dou Shenxing was puzzled and asked him. Guo Zhongshu replied, "Don't mind me, I'm just awkwardly imitating." The eunuch (undoubtedly beardless) was so infuriated he complained to the emperor. Because cutting off one's body hair was contrary to Confucian social norms, Guo Zhongshu was removed from the Directorate of Education and assigned to the Taixue to review historical manuscripts. In the following months he again violated many rules and conventions, and the emperor had to pardon him again and again on account of his unique talent. Whenever he had too much to drink Guo Zhongshu could never control his tongue, and his slanderous remarks soon reached the ears of others. Guo Zhongshu also had a habit of selling his official accessories. Since these behaviors were punishable by death, when he was reported the emperor could only reduce his death sentence to an exile to Deng Prefecture with a round of clubbing. The year was 977, and he died when he got to Linyi in Qi Prefecture. He reportedly said "I will die today!" and stooped down to dig his grave with his hands, and when the hole got to the size of his face he collapsed and died. The escorting guards had to bury him hurriedly on the side of the main road, and it was several months later when his family dug out his remains for a reburial. ==Han Jian==
Han Jian
Guo Zhongshu authored at least 6 titles, all of them in the fields of palaeography and lexicography. Only one work is extant, the palaeographic compilation Han Jian (), which, among other materials, features the inscriptions of the Stone Drums of Qin. The name of the dictionary means "making the bamboo sweet" and refers to the process of preparation of the bamboo slips for writing (so called , 殺青, "killing the green" ). Despite being included into the bibliographic chapter of the History of Song, this work was much neglected during the following dynasties. Veracity of some interpretations in the Han Jian was not proven until the second half of the 20th century. ==Gallery==
Gallery
File:Guo Zhongshu - Summer Palace of Emperor Ming Huang - Google Art Project.jpg|Summer Palace of Emperor Ming File:Guo Zhongshu, Bringing a Lute to an Immortal's Pavilion, Freer Gallery of Art, Washington.jpg|Bringing a Lute to an Immortal's Pavilion File:Guo Zhongshu-Traveling on the River in Snow.jpg|Traveling on the River in Snow File:Moulin à eau, Anonyme fin Xe siècle.jpg|Riverside grain mill File:MET DP165840.jpg|Wangchuan villa File:MET DP165839.jpg|Wangchuan villa == See also ==
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