Born in Meizhou (Sichuan Province) with the style
name Zi Zhan and sobriquet Dongpo Jiushi, Su Shi was a famous writer,
calligrapher and painter. Su, who once took office like Jiayou Jinshi, fully
demonstrated his preeminent talent for poetry, prose, calligraphy and painting.
With his father Su Xun and his younger brother Su Zhe, the Three Sus were quite
famous in literary circles.
Adopting the
style of Wen Tong, Su was adept at depicting bamboo. He was among the earliest
to advocate the scholar painting and later founded Huzhou
School. Some of Su's most representative paintings were Withered
Trees and Grotesque Rocks, Bamboo and Rock, etc. Among the Four Great
Masters of the Song Dynasty with Huang Tingjian, Mi Fu and Cai Xiang, Su was
also an expert in running script and regular script. Having absorbed advantages
from calligraphers such as Yan Zhenqing, Liu Gongquan, Chu Suiliang, Xu Hao, Li
Beihai, and Yang Ningshi, Su made innovations on the basis of his deep
understanding of calligraphy rather than his predecessors. He developed his own
way of wielding a brush, and emphasized reforming writing tools.
Su was an all-rounder with
uncommon talents in poetry, ci, prose and painting. His prose was
comparable to the high level of Ouyang Xiu's work, and the two were called
Ou-Su. Su-Huang refers to the two top poets of that period -- Su Shi and Huang
Tingjian. Su's poem was teemed with exaggerated metaphors. A small group of them
represented the sufferings of the people, scolding governors' dissipation and
debauchery. His poems exerted great influence on literature of later
generations. As to ci, Su Shi and Xin Qiji were called Su-Xin for their
ci were both of powerful and freestyle. They brought new atmosphere to
the circle of ci and broke the monopoly of restrained style. Another of
his contribution to ci was that he liberated ci from music. From
then on, ci became an independent lyric. In a word, Su Shi advocated the
artistic creation from the bottom of one's heart.