Category: Chinese Character & Japanese Kanji Calligraphy Wall Scrolls

DOUBLE HAPPINESS Happy Marriage Wall Scroll

DOUBLE HAPPINESS Happy Marriage Wall Scroll
arrow
87cm
34¼"
arrow
line
arrow 49.5cm
19½"
arrow




Typical Gallery Price: $70.00

Your Price: $29.88U.S. Dollars

GBP £19.13British Pounds
Euro €22.86Euro
Canadian $30.87Canadian Dollars
Australian $33.15Australian Dollars

SOLD

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



Approximate Measurements

Painting: 31.5cm x 31cm  ≈  12½" x 12¼"

Silk Scroll: 40.5cm x 87cm  ≈  16" x 34¼"

Width at Wooden Knobs: 49.5cm  ≈  19½"

Information about caring for your new Wall Scroll

Double Happiness

Chinese Calligraphy Scroll

This is a common gift for Chinese couples getting married or newly married couples, but it appropriate for anyone for whom you wish the greatest of happiness.

As we say in the west, "Two heads are better than one" Well, in the east, two "happinesses" are certainly better than one.

This is not really a character that is pronounced very often - it's almost exclusively used in written form. However, if pressed, most Chinese people will pronounce this "shuang xi" (double happy) although literally there are two "xi" characters combined in this calligraphy (but nobody will say "xi xi").

In Chinese, "xi" is pronounced like "she" but with your tongue sitting in the bottom of your mouth and your teeth slightly open (there is no sound in English exactly like this).


This piece is painted with special Chinese ink on rice paper mounted to a traditional silk scroll.

Chinese Calligraphy is only practiced by those with a keen and agile hand. It is an art that dates back thousands of years, and great artists, writers, and poets are often admired for their calligraphy ability and style.

The artist's name is "Li Dan Qing" who is from Beijing, China. He is an older man with good calligraphy skills.

To create this art, Li Dan Qing used special Chinese ink on thick rice paper. Then I took it to the best painting mounters in Beijing to mount the painting on a silk scroll.

This hanging scroll is really nice since it doesn't require framing. Just hang it on your wall as Chinese people have done for centuries.

The scroll that you receive may vary slightly from the image above, as this series of calligraphy artwork is all handmade to order.



Select

Custom Double Happiness Calligraphy Wall Scrolls & Portraits

Double Happiness

I like the festive red and white double happiness scroll that you see above, but if you want different colors, a larger size, or higher-quality calligraphy...

Double Happiness Portrait Tan

We can have a custom Double Happiness wall scroll created for you, simply click on the button above, and start customizing your Double Happiness artwork.

Double Happiness Portrait Red

Custom wall scrolls start at $29.88
and portraits start at $13 less ($16.88).

If you are looking for something very special, we also have investment-quality calligraphy available from a famous master-calligrapher in Beijing for an additional $40 fee.

Click the "Select & Customize" button above to see all the options.



Married to China...

Surprise, you're married!

It all happened so fast, and yet in some ways it takes forever.

Our Wedding

My new wife, Ling Hua (Cat) and I
goof off at our semi-informal wedding dinner.

I think that from the day we met in 2002 Ling Hua (known by her friends as "Cat") and I became best friends. From that day on, we spent a lot of time playing badminton, hiking, and backpacking together.

Somewhere along the way, she became a girlfriend. At the same time, I was supposed to return to "the real world" in America. I flew home, leaving a lifetime of memories in China.

Coming back to America, I felt a certain amount of culture-shock as I tried to re-adjust back to an American lifestyle.

I returned to my old job and started making about 10 times what I did in China - but money does not equal happiness. I really missed Cat and my life back in Asia.

I flew to China for a visit, only a few months later. Before I did, I asked Cat if we ought to look into what's involved in getting married. I am sure this freaked her out, but it also made her happy. When I arrived in China, she had done her homework. She told me it should take 30 days to complete the process with all of the Chinese government red tape (and I do mean red).

Knowing that it is impossible to complete the process in the short one week trip that I was on, we started to do it for fun. The medical exam was first, and involved the standard pokes, turning your head and coughing, and super-small Chinese-sized hospital gowns that left me mooning half of the people waiting in the hospital.

The next day we headed to the American embassy, to get a "certificate of marriageability". Picking up the certificate the next morning, we headed to the Bureau of Foreign Marriages in Beijing. Turning in the paperwork, Cat began to plead our case to see if we could speed up the process. I put in my two cent and said a few things in Chinese. This shocked the government official who complimented me on my Chinese. I replied in the typical Chinese way of being humble, "Where where?" which in Chinese culture means, "Where and who are you talking about? It can't be me!" The official laughed and we had a good time joking around with him. He told us to come back in the afternoon, and we said goodbye.

Camel Train Adventures

Cat enjoying her time on our "camel train"
across a desert near Inner-Mongolia.

I didn't know what we were going back for in the afternoon, but when we returned, I was a bit startled. Official certificates of marriage were handed to both of us, and we were sworn in and announced as husband and wife with amazing efficiency. Fifteen minutes after arriving, we both left, stunned, as husband and wife. A process everyone said would take at least 30 days and be really difficult!

Her family was shocked too, but in a very Chinese way, they apologized for not having a ceremony planned for us. Cat's family had become very dear and close to me in the past, and when they got the news, I was told by Cat's father that I was as much a part of the family as if we shared the same blood.

I returned to America, and started getting all the paperwork together to get a visa and residency for Cat in the states. After the application was refused by U.S. Immigration, because "I was not a resident of America" - regardless of the fact that I was a natural born citizen. I sent the paperwork to Cat in China, and told her to take it to the Embassy. Well, nothing is easy, and they refused to take the paperwork from her, insisting that I be present. Three days later, I was in China again, and suddenly I discovered how difficult my own government could be. All the U.S. Government websites had the wrong information, and the Embassy in Beijing said that I was not a resident of China either (even though my passport had 4 years worth of almost continuous Chinese visas).

Although I was distraught, I returned to my new family home in Beijing, to find that with 4 days notice, about 20 to 30 of Cat's extended family members had flown in from around China to come and celebrate our marriage. I didn't expect it, but in Chinese culture, family means everything. I was humbled and honored as we had a somewhat informal, but traditional wedding celebration. I even had a Chinese silk tunic custom-tailored for the occasion (pictured above).

I won't go into the rest of my woes, but I have been flying back and forth to China, fighting the government for my wife's rights to live in the states with me.

About 10 visits to my congresswoman's office, 2 letters to a U.S. Senator, one letter to George Bush (waste of time), numerous emails to the U.S. Consulate, and 16 months later, the U.S. Government finally issued a visa, and my wife and I were allowed to reunite.

Cat and I

Cat and I in Southern China...
Heading up river to a mountain village, looking for artists.

Typical Gallery Price: $70.00

Your Price: $29.88U.S. Dollars

GBP £19.13British Pounds
Euro €22.86Euro
Canadian $30.87Canadian Dollars
Australian $33.15Australian 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:

Is "Oriental" politically correct?

Everyone is going to hate me for this, but here is the truth:

Some people who currently prefer to call themselves "Asian-Americans" woke up one morning and decided that "Oriental" is now a word to be used only for Oriental rugs, Oriental art and lamps, or any other inanimate object from Eastern Asia.

When I was teaching English in China, many of my students would refer to themselves as "Oriental", and I would correct them and say, It's better to say that you are Asian or Chinese rather than Oriental, but I was at a loss as to explain why.
My Chinese students were very smart, and came back at me with the fact that being from Asia was too broad a term, and asked if Persians and Saudi Arabians should also refer to themselves as "Asian".

I then had to make excuses for my geographically-challenged fellow Americans* who had long ago replaced the correct term of "Oriental" (meaning the bio-geographic region including southern Asia and the Malay Archipelago as far as the Philippines, Borneo and Java), and replaced it with "Asian" which in truth encompasses half the world's population - many of whom do not consider themselves to be of the same race as those from the Orient.
(For those Americans reading this and who've slept through their high school geography class: It's true, the whole Middle East, and half of Russia are located in the Asian continent)

But I admit I am not helping the problem. You see, almost half the people that find our website did so while searching for "Asian art" and I have done a lot to promote our business as "Purveyors of Asian art". So you can blame me too.
To truly be an Asian art gallery, we would have to offer artwork from beyond the Orient, from places like India, Persia (Iran), most Arab nations, and Russia.

Notes:
There are a lot of things that present problems in the English language.
Usually these problems are thanks to mistakes of the past.
That's why we have to say, "He's an Indian from India" versus "He's a Native-American Indian" (Thanks to Mr. Columbus).

Things to learn:
Do not refer to a Persian (Iranian) as Arab.
If you refer to an Arab-American as being Asian, they will look at you funny and possibly be offended.
If you refer to a person from India as Asian, you will mildly amuse them.
If you refer to a Russian as being Asian, they will pour borsch on you (my ex-wife is Russian, so I know this to be true from experience).
Using "Asian" to refer to a person from Singapore is okay, but they will later, as if by accident, mention that they are in fact from the most civilized country in Asia.

*We citizens of the USA call ourselves "Americans" which seems a bit arrogant to our neighbors who reside on the continents of North and South America. Keep in mind, Canadians and Mexicans are also from North America, but refer to themselves in more correct geographic terms.

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