Category: Birds & Flowers Wall Scrolls & Paintings

Long Life Full of Riches and Honor
Cranes, Pine Tree & Flowers Wall Scroll

Long Life Full of Riches and Honor - Cranes, Pine Tree & Flowers Wall Scroll
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61¾"
(156.7cm)
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arrow 19¾"
(50.2cm)
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Typical Gallery Price: $150.00

Your Price:
US$68.88U.S. Dollars

GBP £41.80British Pounds
Euro €46.49Euro
Canadian $73.81Canadian Dollars
Australian $75.78Australian Dollars


Approximate Measurements:
Painting: 12½" x 39¼"   (32.1cm x 99.8cm)
Silk Scroll: 16¼" x 61¾"   (41.2cm x 156.7cm)
Width of Wooden Scroll Roller: 19¾"   (50.2cm)

Information about caring for your new Wall Scroll


富貴迎年

Long Life full of Riches and Honor

This is a great scroll featuring two beautiful cranes, and a background of peony flowers.

Long Life Full of Riches and Honor - Cranes, Pine Tree & Flowers Wall Scroll close up view

Close up view of the crane artwork mounted to this silk brocade wall scroll

The title in Chinese is "Fu Gui Yan Nian".

In Chinese culture, peony flowers often represent "honor" and "riches", while cranes are a symbol of "immortality", or "long life".

Some believe that putting these images on your wall, will bring you long life, riches, and honor. I would just buy it because it is a beautiful hand-painted scroll.

Qin Xia works on another one of her paintings

Qin Xia works diligently on
all of her paintings to bring
out even the finest detail.



I got a chance to visit the artist's studio in Jinan city recently. I am so impressed by her style and detail in all of the paintings in her collection. I bought as much of her work as I could possibly afford, and I am sure that I will be back for more in a few months.

I also discovered that because she more than a little famous in China, there are a lot of forgeries on the market. I was given a lesson on how to spot forged paintings that are signed with her name. Of course, the best way to avoid that is to get your work directly from the artist and her family, which is why I made the trip to Jinan in the first place.


More about this piece of Asian artwork:

Chinese artist, Qin Xia

Her finished work
is always beautiful.

The artist, Qin Xia lives in Jinan which is the capital city of Shandong Province in northern China.

The red stamp and the Chinese characters close to the stamp say "Qin Xia" (the artist's signature). The other Chinese characters express the title and year painted (2005) in an ancient method that uses certain Chinese characters instead of numbers to represent the current year.

This is an "elaborate style painting" which has a lot of detail and uses a delicate technique with a very fine brush.
Each stroke is meticulously applied. This technique takes a long time for the artist to complete.

This is painted on special xuan paper (known by most as "rice paper") with Chinese black ink and watercolors. Later, I took this painting to Beijing where our master-scroll-maker handbuilt a wonderful silk scroll for this artwork.



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Typical Gallery Price: $150.00

Your Price:
US$68.88U.S. Dollars

GBP £41.80British Pounds
Euro €46.49Euro
Canadian $73.81Canadian Dollars
Australian $75.78Australian Dollars


All orders billed in U.S. Dollars.
Other currencies shown for reference at approximate exchange rates.


Item Location: USA
details


Gary's random little facts about China:

Where's my soy sauce?
When you sit down to eat at a restaurant in China, you will almost never see a bottle of soy sauce on the table like you might at a Chinese restaurant in the USA or UK.
In Chinese cooking culture, soy sauce is a seasoning reserved for use in the kitchen.
The fact that soy sauce can be found at Chinese restaurants outside of China probably comes from the confusion between Japanese food and Chinese food.
The most popular Japanese food outside of Japan is sushi, which of course is always served with soy sauce and is the most likely cause of the confusion.

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