Category: South Chinese Folk Art Paintings & Batiks

Lantern Festival & Dragon Dancing Chinese Folk Art

Lantern Festival & Dragon Dancing Chinese Folk Art line
arrow
39cm
15¼"
arrow
line
arrow 54cm
21¼"
arrow




Typical Gallery Price: $70.00

Your Price: $29.95U.S. Dollars

GBP £19.39British Pounds
Euro €23.59Euro
Canadian $31.40Canadian Dollars
Australian $32.66Australian Dollars



See how "Lantern Festival & Dragon Dancing Chinese Folk Art" would look after being professionally framed

Want to see what this painting might look like after you frame it?
Frame View

Is your computer monitor too small?
Click below for a smaller framed view
Zoom to 75% | Zoom to 50%

Approximate Measurements

54cm x 39cm  ≈  21¼" x 15¼"


鬧元宵

Lantern Festival & Dragon Dancing

The Chinese title written on this painting is "Nao Yuan Xiao". The word "Nao" means to celebrate, and "Yuan Xiao" is a type of round sweet dumpling that looks like a ping pong ball which is eaten during the annual Lantern Festival in China.


About the artist...

The artist Pan Xiao-Ling, who created these Chinese folk art paintings

The creator of this artwork,
Pan Xiao-Ling, in her home.

This painting is by a woman named pānxiǎolíng (Pan Xiao Ling).

She is from an area known as "Huxian" in the Shaanxi Province of China. Born in 1958, she began painting in 1974.
Her paintings were the first Chinese folk art ever accepted for a series of postcards officially issued by the state-run "China Post" (Chinese Postal Service).

Exhibitions of her work have been seen in America, Japan, and Singapore.

Pan Xiao-Ling's work is a combination of folk and modern art. Her inspiration comes from growing up in a small farming village in the middle of China. This influence really shows in her paintings which usually depict the simple village life in the countryside of China.


About the Painting itself...

The artist used "shui fen" (paint powder and water - similar to gouache), on thick paper to create this painting.

If you get a piece of mat board cut for you, this Chinese painting will fit nicely in a standard 18" x 24" frame. If you want really wide matting, you could even use a 22" x 28" standard picture frame. You should probably get the matting cut professionally, but you can probably handle the rest yourself. Please see our step by step guide to framing Asian art if you want some tips.


About Chinese Folk Art and its History...

This style of folk art was born in the 1950's just after the Revolution (when Chairman Mao took power). The art developed independently in Huxian (Hu County) in the Shaanxi Province for many years (the same Province where you will find the Terracotta Soldiers).

Things changed a little when the good and bad of the Cultural Revolution came to pass in China. Within a few years, art was only acceptable if it portrayed some form of socialist propaganda, or showed some form of working together in pursuit of Mao's Communist ideals. This propaganda art seldom provided any pay for the artist who were instead forced into hard labor on communal farms to survive.

Chairman Mao

As the last of the Cultural Revolution sputtered to a stop with the death of Chairman Mao in 1976, freedom began to slowly ring again when Deng Xiao-Ping took power. Deng Xiao-Ping brought China out of the dark ages, and away from "Maoism" and Communism (one of the greatest leaders in Chinese history in my humble opinion). By the 1980's, freedom to once again practice 3000 years of artistic tradition emerged. Chinese folk art was finally allowed to be what it was meant to be, a way to freely express various scenes of daily life and snapshots of Chinese village culture.

Stamp set of folk artists issued by the Chinese post office.

Chinese Folk Art Today

According to Chinese Government statistics, there are now more than 2000 folk artists in Southern China. Sixteen of these artists have been recognized as the "Famous Masters" of Chinese folk art by the Chinese Cultural Arts Bureau. These sixteen artists were recently honored by China Post with the issuing of a set of commemorative postage stamps. Of these sixteen masters, we represent three of them: Pan Xiao-Ling, Cao Quan-Tang, and Zhang Qing-Yi.

A lot has changed in the folk art community of China since I first started selling these paintings about 4 years ago.

Chinese folk artists have become rather famous, and sought after for exhibitions around the world. Recently these artists formed a labor union of sorts, to ensure that they receive a handsome sum for all of their paintings. Most of them have been able to improve their station in life through the sale of their artwork. One of these artists once said, "We've become good little capitalists, just like President Nixon dreamed of".



« Previous Artwork | Next Artwork »

Typical Gallery Price: $70.00

Your Price: $29.95U.S. Dollars

GBP £19.39British Pounds
Euro €23.59Euro
Canadian $31.40Canadian Dollars
Australian $32.66Australian 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 things about China:

Are you SURE?

You can search long and hard, in every drugstore and sundries market in China, and you will not find underarm deodorant for sale anywhere.
After traveling all over China, I know this to be true everywhere in China except Hong Kong.

If you ask a Chinese person why there is no deodorant for sale, they will tell you plainly, "Chinese people do not smell bad".

My reply is, "Have you never been on a crowded bus in the summer?"

Artwork Search:

Oriental Outpost Logo FlagTowerwatercolor
ArtPaintingsAsian Art Gallery
Chinese Calligraphy Search
Adventures in Asian Art

Key / Important Pages Information Pages "How To" Pages Search Engine & Tech Stuff
Home About Us Asian Art Questions & Answers How We Make Our Wall Scrolls Site Map
Asian Art Gallery About China How Paintings are Mounted How To Care For Wall Scrolls Asian Language Tools
New Asian Art Arrivals F.A.Q. Asian Art Adventures Framing Suggestions Characters
Love in Chinese/Japanese Gary's Stories Asian Calligraphy Search How To Frame Asian Art Asian Art Index
Strength in Chinese/Japanese Contact Us Japanese Kakejiku   Chinese/Japanese Dictionary

Copyright Oriental Outpost 2002-2010   -   All Rights Reserved
Image Use Policy | Privacy Policy