Category: Landscapes of Asia Paintings

Spring in South China
Chinese Landscape Painting

Spring in South China - Chinese Landscape Painting line
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77.9cm
30¾"
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line
arrow 75.8cm
29¾"
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Typical Gallery Price: $225.00

Your Price: $89.88U.S. Dollars

GBP £57.54British Pounds
Euro €68.77Euro
Canadian $92.87Canadian Dollars
Australian $99.72Australian Dollars

SOLD

Similar artwork may be available, please post your request on our forum if interested



See how "Spring in South China - Chinese Landscape Painting" would look after being professionally framed

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Approximate Measurements

Painting: 65.6cm x 67.3cm  ≈  25¾" x 26½"

Silk Border/Matting: 75.8cm x 77.9cm  ≈  29¾" x 30¾"

Information about how this Asian painting is mounted

Spring in South China

This is the roughly translated title of the painting. The Chinese title is "Jiang Nan Chun".

This painting features a small boat making its way down the river.

A close up view of some of
the detail of this painting

To break it down:

Jiang = River
Nan = South (South China)
Chun = Spring Season

When you see Jiang Nan (River South) it almost always means "Southern China" and often refers to the Yangtze (Yangzi) River.

The karst-looking mountains in the background suggest to me that this is the Li River near Guilin, although the title suggests that it is the Yangtze (Yanzi) River

This artwork is signed Artist Shi Feng (Shi Feng) which happens to be the pen name of the artist whose real name is Asian Artist Yang Jian-Feng (Yang Jian-Feng).

He is a bit shy, but his artwork has become popular in mainland China, and Taiwan (which is rare, if you understand the politics between Taiwan and the mainland). You may also find his paintings in art galleries of Australia and Japan.

We decided to bring his artwork to North America, the United Kingdom, and the rest of the world.


About the Artist:

Yang Jian-Feng was born in 1954. He developed a deep interest in painting during his childhood. He taught himself to paint, and struggled along until the day he met a famous Chinese artist named Liu Zhen-Ye. Soon enough, Yang Jian-Feng became the apprentice and student of Liu Zhen Ye. For years, Yang Jian-Feng learned everything he could from his master, and finally established himself as a master-artist in China.

His artwork has spanned a few categories, but his signature-style are colorful landscapes often featuring youngsters riding water buffalo as they also seem to enjoy the scene depicted in the painting.

His paints many of his most popular titles again and again. since they seem to offer a simple composition that is in tune with the rhythm of the countryside in Southern China.

Currently, Yang Jian-Feng is a member of Chinese Artists Association, Hebei Provincial Branch, and is a designated master artist of The Eastern Calligraphy and Painting Research Institute.


About the Painting:

This was completely hand-painted on xuan paper (rice paper) then mounted by laminating it to several more sheets of rice paper and adding a nice shiny white silk border that you can use as matting when you frame this artwork.

Shipped to you in a "ready-to-frame" condition, rolled up in a sturdy mailing tube.

Typical Gallery Price: $225.00

Your Price: $89.88U.S. Dollars

GBP £57.54British Pounds
Euro €68.77Euro
Canadian $92.87Canadian Dollars
Australian $99.72Australian Dollars

SOLD

Similar artwork may be available, please post your request on our forum if interested



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


Item Location: USA
details


Gary's random little things about China:

Will there be enough hotels?

As the Chinese Government prepares Beijing for the 2008 Olympic Games, here are some related facts:
More than 200 new hotels are being built in Beijing.
Almost 100 miles of new subway and local transit rail lines are being laid.
Hundreds of miles of new and improved highways are being built.
Almost 100,000 billboard signs have been put up to encourage Chinese people to be friendly to foreigners (and to stop spitting in public).
Beijing taxi drivers have been ordered to learn basic landmark and navigational English.

The greater effect:
From the construction associated with the 2008 Olympics, The Three-Gorges Dam project, and other construction in China, there is a worldwide shortage of concrete and steel.
Because of the Para-Olympics, all new subway lines in Beijing are incorporating elevators making Beijing more accessible to disabled people than ever before.
Beijing's skies are usually gray by nature. In years past, on the days when the clouds clear, the sky was brown with pollution.
But in preparations for the Olympics along with a new public enthusiasm for environmental issues, gross-polluting vehicles have been banned by the Chinese Government.
So for the last few years, when the clouds clear over Beijing, blue sky can be seen for the first time in decades.

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