Category: Beautiful Asian Women, Tough Chinese Warriors
...And other People of Asia Artwork

Yang Gui Fei Poem
Chinese Painting

Yang Gui Fei Poem - Chinese Painting line
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30¾"
(77.9cm)
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line
arrow 30½"
(77.3cm)
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Typical Gallery Price: $220.00

Your Price:
US$98.88U.S. Dollars

GBP £60.01British Pounds
Euro €66.74Euro
Canadian $105.96Canadian Dollars
Australian $108.78Australian Dollars


See how "Yang Gui Fei Poem - Chinese Painting" would look after being professionally framed

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Approximate Measurements:
Painting: 26½" x 26¾"   (67.3cm x 67.9cm)
Silk Border/Matting: 30½" x 30¾"   (77.3cm x 77.9cm)

Information about how this Asian painting is mounted


長恨歌詩意

Yue Guifei's Tragic Tale

This painting features a poem about Yue Guifei (one of the famous four beauties of ancient China). The poem was written by Bai Juyi during the Tang Dynasty.

In the painting, you will see Yue Guifei surrounded by Lychee fruits (her favorite fruit).

The title of this painting is simply "Chang Hen De Shi Yi" which is basically the title of the long poem. Also indicated in the Chinese characters is the fact that this was painted in Autumn of 2006 as well as the artist's signature.


About the artist...

The artist's name is lǐshuǐyī (Li Shui-Yi) who lives in the Sichuan Province of Southern China. He specializes in a style of traditional artwork that has an abstract essence.

His paintings are signed with just his given name of shuǐyī. You may be able to read his red chop which also contains the same characters of his given name shuǐyī but written in this ancient seal script form of Chinese.



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Typical Gallery Price: $220.00

Your Price:
US$98.88U.S. Dollars

GBP £60.01British Pounds
Euro €66.74Euro
Canadian $105.96Canadian Dollars
Australian $108.78Australian Dollars


All orders billed in U.S. Dollars.
Other currencies shown for reference at approximate exchange rates.


Item Location: USA
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Gary's random little facts about China:

More traffic tidbits:

Parking your car on the sidewalk is legal in most places in China. I am talking fully on the sidewalk, and fully blocking the sidewalk, so that nobody can walk there at all. After all, there is a perfectly good roadway for pedestrians and cars to share just past the edge of the sidewalk - right?
In many urban areas, there is a sidewalk parking attendant who will ensure that you park in such a way that no one can use the sidewalk at all. They will also charge a fee of 2 Yuan (26 cents) for up to a full day of sidewalk parking privileges.

The green light means "go". The Yellow light means "20 more cars should enter the intersection". The red light means "5 more cars enter the intersection and become a nuisense to pedestrians trying to cross the street".
Actually, the green light means "Try to go, but you'll probably have to wait for the yellow or red light before you get your chance".

If you get in a car accident, it's best to argue briefly with the other driver, and then both drive away. When the police get involved, everyone gets fined, and someone might lose their license. The fines are generally higher than what it will cost to fix your car, so hanging around to exchange insurance information is rare in minor fender-benders.
If your car is too damaged to drive away, you are screwed. The police own and operate all of the tow trucks in most Chinese cities. You will be fined, charged for towing, charged an impound fee, and may lose your license.

On long stretches of highway, police checkpoints are occasionally set up. They may be stopping drivers and summarily fining them for wearing sunglasses or talking on a mobile phone while driving. However, in the next stretch of highway, another police checkpoint may be issuing fines for driving without sunglasses.

Under certain circumstances, and if you are really unlucky, drivers who get in injury accidents while drunk may be executed. If you are caught drinking and driving just once, you will be fined, and will probably lose your drivers license for the rest of your life.
Thus, drunk driving has become very rare in China.

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