Category: Tigers & Dragons Paintings and Wall Scrolls

Mighty Chinese Tiger Painting

Mighty Chinese Tiger Painting line
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58.9cm
23¼"
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line
arrow 88.6cm
34¾"
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Typical Gallery Price: $200.00

Your Price: $68.88U.S. Dollars

GBP £44.10British Pounds
Euro €52.70Euro
Canadian $71.17Canadian Dollars
Australian $76.42Australian Dollars



See how "Mighty Chinese Tiger Painting" would look after being professionally framed

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Approximate Measurements

Painting: 68.6cm x 48.9cm  ≈  27" x 19¼"

Silk Border/Matting: 88.6cm x 58.9cm  ≈  34¾" x 23¼"

Information about how this Asian painting is mounted

山君

"Monarch of the Mountains" Chinese Tiger Painting

The Chinese title written on this painting means the monarch, king, or ruler of the mountains.

Other characters include the traditional Chinese way to express the year painted (2009) and the artist's name and personal red seal.


The Tiger King:

The Chinese Tiger represents the king of all animals in Chinese culture (Just as we see the Lion as the king in western culture). The tiger is often seen as the Chinese symbol of strength and power.

Chinese people have taken this association a step further by claiming that tigers have the symbol of a king on their heads.

Let me explain by first showing you the character "Wang" which is written below in several forms...

zhuanshu wang lishu wang kaishu printed wang kaishu calligraphy wang xing-kaishu wang xingshu wang

This character means "king".
If you have ever looked at a tiger face to face, you will see the fur on the tiger's head is in a similar shape to this "Wang character".

Take a look at this painting and see if you can find this on the tiger's head.
If you aren't Chinese, it might take a little imagination to see the symbol, but anyone who speaks and writes Chinese will tell you that it's true.

Asian Tiger Artist, Yin Yi-Qiu in his studio in Shandong Province of Northern China

About the Artwork:

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

This was painted with special Chinese black ink and watercolors on xuan paper (often incorrectly called "rice paper"). The artwork was then mounted with a silk brocade border, and is ready-to-frame when you receive it.


About the Artist:

The artist of this work is 尹貽鞦 (Yin Yi-Qiu). He was born in Zoucheng in the Shandong Province of Northern China. Nearing age 50th, he has been painting for more than 30 years.

He studied various media and styles of art such as watercolor, gouache, and oil painting in a variety of landscapes, birds, and flowers. But in the last few years, tigers have become his passion. In fact, tigers are the only thing he paints these days.

I am not sure how many of these I will have in the future because his work is getting very popular, and soon will be out of my price range. You see, recently he has been very busy with a series of major art exhibitions at upscale art galleries in Guangzhou (not far from the Hong Kong border) and other places in China.



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Typical Gallery Price: $200.00

Your Price: $68.88U.S. Dollars

GBP £44.10British Pounds
Euro €52.70Euro
Canadian $71.17Canadian Dollars
Australian $76.42Australian 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:

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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