His work describes a gathering of 42 literati at the Orchid Pavilion near the town of Shaoxing, Zhejiang Province, during the Shangsi Festival, also known as the Spring Purification Festival, the Double Third Festival, or the March 3rd Festival, to compose poems and enjoy wine.
Wang wrote a preface for the collection of the poems they created on the occasion. With the invention of beer pong yet centuries away, Wang and company made do playing Qu Shui Liu Shang, an ancient game that involved floating cups of rice wine along a winding stream. Whomever the cup stopped by would have to drink it and compose a verse.
Wang’s calligraphy piece became an extremely popular art work, so much so that Emperor Taizong of the Tang Dynasty apparently had great admiration for it, and requested the original copy. The work was reported lost to keep it safely in the hands of Wang’s family, so the emperor dispatched an official in disguise as a scholar to find it. The official found the original, and the script was copied onto stone, while the original went on to be buried with the emperor in his mausoleum.
Chinese tourists today mimic Qu Shui Liu Shang by floating plastic cups to recreate the gathering. Geese are also raised on the Pavilion property. Wang supposedly learned how to move his wrists for calligraphy by watching the geese move their necks.
While today’s Orchid Pavilion is not the original because the exact location is unknown, it still remains a great and popular Shaoxing cultural site.
Featured Image: Wang Xizhi’s work describes a gathering of 42 literati at the Orchid Pavilion near the town of Shaoxing, Zhejiang Province, during the Shangsi Festival to compose poems and enjoy wine. (Yamamoto Jakurin/Kaznov17/Wikipedia)
Orchid Pavilion 很好!