Category: Asian Art Bargain Bin

Chinese Cranes and Bamboo Painting

Chinese Cranes and Bamboo Painting line
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29¼"
(74.5cm)
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line
arrow 30"
(76cm)
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Typical Gallery Price: $40.00

Your Price:
US$20.00U.S. Dollars

GBP £12.14British Pounds
Euro €13.50Euro
Canadian $21.43Canadian Dollars
Australian $22.00Australian Dollars


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Approximate Measurements:
Painting: 26" x 25¼"   (66cm x 64.5cm)
Silk Border/Matting: 30" x 29¼"   (76cm x 74.5cm)

Information about how this Asian painting is mounted


Chinese Cranes and Bamboo Painting

This painting is discounted because of a "red ghost" and some minor stray marks.

If you are wondering, red ghost refers to a red shadow of the artist's red signature stamp. This is sometimes transfer from a previous painting which happens when the artist signs all of his work at the same time and piles up the paintings before the red ink is dry. It's more common than I would like, and it costs me a lot of money - but I am picky about quality, so my loss is your gain.



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Typical Gallery Price: $40.00

Your Price:
US$20.00U.S. Dollars

GBP £12.14British Pounds
Euro €13.50Euro
Canadian $21.43Canadian Dollars
Australian $22.00Australian 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:

Crossing the Street: Human Frogger in China
If you are from my generation, you may remember the video game called "Frogger". It involved crossing a busy road while narrowly dodging cars and truck, often both in front of and behind you at the same time.

Well you can play real live Frogger every time you cross the street in China. It is perfectly normal to cross a four or six-lane road, one lane at a time. You stand motionless on the white, dashed line between lanes as cars and trucks whiz by you on both sides with only inches to spare. When the next lane is clear, you advance (there is no retreat in this game, that could get you killed, since drivers in China would never expect that).

If you did this in America, drivers would come to a screeching halt and think you were crazy (they might even tell you so, using colorful words and hand gestures). It is simply a different culture, or rather a different way of doing things in modern Chinese culture.

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