Category: Birds & Flowers Wall Scrolls & Paintings

Birds and Peony Flowers Wall Scroll

Birds and Peony Flowers Wall Scroll
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65½"
(166.3cm)
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line
arrow 19½"
(49.5cm)
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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 43¼"   (31.5cm x 110cm)
Silk Scroll: 16" x 65½"   (40.5cm x 166.3cm)
Width of Wooden Scroll Roller: 19½"   (49.5cm)

Information about caring for your new Wall Scroll


Birds and Peony Flowers

Birds and Peony Flowers Wall Scroll close up view

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

This wall scroll has a very classic look. It is painted on tan xuan paper with embedded gold flecks. It was then mounted as a handmade crisp white silk brocade wall scroll in our workshop.


The peony is the unofficial national flower of China. It dates back far into Chinese history. In fact if you were alive from the Tang Dynasty to the Song Dynasty (618-1279AD), you would see these flowers all around the Emperor's palace. It was the favorite flower many people from the Emperor down to the common peasants.

In fact, during the Tang Dynasty (618-907AD) legend has it that the emperor's concubines would often wear peonies in their hair vying for favor from the emperor.

In an interesting twist, the roots of this family of flower are often used in Chinese herbal medicine.


This piece was painted by Lin Yun who lives in a village near Jinan in the Shandong Province of Northern China.



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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 fortune cookie?
So after traveling to China, you have just finished your first meal in a real Chinese restaurant.
But the bill comes, and the waiter forgot to bring everyone their fortune cookies!
Well, actually not...
You see, fortune cookies did not come from China (at least not directly).
One legend has it in the late 1800s or early 1900s, a Chinese man running a noodle making shop in San Francisco accidentally mixed a bunch of sugar in his dough, and didn't want to waste it. So he made cookies and stuck papers with people's fortunes on them as a novelty.
In the end, it's really the Chinese visitors to America that are confused when the waiter brings them a blob of sugary noodle dough with a piece of paper stuck in it.

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