Category: Colorful Cranes & Bird Landscape Paintings & Scrolls

Autumn Rhyme
Colorful Cranes
Small Wall Scroll

Autumn Rhyme - Colorful Cranes - Small Wall Scroll
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48¼"
(122.6cm)
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line
arrow 17¼"
(43.6cm)
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Typical Gallery Price: $120.00

Your Price:
US$58.88U.S. Dollars

GBP £35.74British Pounds
Euro €39.74Euro
Canadian $63.10Canadian Dollars
Australian $64.78Australian Dollars


Approximate Measurements:
Painting: 10" x 26¼"   (25.5cm x 66.6cm)
Silk Scroll: 13½" x 48¼"   (34.6cm x 122.6cm)
Width of Wooden Scroll Roller: 17¼"   (43.6cm)

Information about caring for your new Wall Scroll


qiūyun

Autumn Rhyme

This is the roughly translated title of this piece.

Autumn Rhyme - Colorful Cranes - Small Wall Scroll close up view

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

Title Information

CharacterPinyinMeaning
qiūqiūAutumn
Fall
yunyunRhyme

This is a tough one to explain. The literal translation of the artist's title leaves you wondering.

Well, in this case, think of what a rhyme is...
I will define the Chinese version of rhyme as, "Words that match in some way, and fall into place". When you hear them, they seem to belong together and create a pleasing sound.

In the Autumn, things just happen, one after the other, like they are supposed to. The birds migrate, the leaves turn orange, and life continues the cycle as it has done for eternity. So, everything just fits together, and falls into place.


This is painted on special xuan paper (rice paper) with then mounted to a hand-made silk scroll.

One of the artists of the Xiao Meng Asian Art Gallery

Chen Wei-Ling puts the finishing touch signature
on the beautiful Asian Artwork that
she and her husband created for me.

This hand-painted artwork is from the

Xiao Meng Asian Art Collection

The artists of this collection are actually a married couple who travel around China together looking for subjects to paint. Their real names are Chen Yong Ping and Chen Wei Ling but they sign all of their work under the single pen name Xiao Meng.

They work as a team on most of these paintings. One of them does the background and the other will handle the detail work on each painting.

The artists take great pride in the fact that they have developed their own unique painting style which they call "hazy painting" (this is roughly translated - it sounds better in Chinese).

They use a combination of "freehand style" and "elaborate style" in their paintings. The background is done using broad fast strokes and spray with very thin paint. The foreground (cranes) are done with a lot of detail using a delicate technique with a very fine brush.



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Typical Gallery Price: $120.00

Your Price:
US$58.88U.S. Dollars

GBP £35.74British Pounds
Euro €39.74Euro
Canadian $63.10Canadian Dollars
Australian $64.78Australian 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:

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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