Category: Tigers & Dragons Paintings and Wall Scrolls

Good Luck Blue Dragon
Chinese Wall Scroll

Good Luck Blue Dragon - Chinese Wall Scroll
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50¼"
(127.5cm)
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line
arrow 26¾"
(67.8cm)
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Typical Gallery Price: $230.00

Your Price:
US$99.88U.S. Dollars

GBP £60.62British Pounds
Euro €67.42Euro
Canadian $107.03Canadian Dollars
Australian $109.88Australian Dollars


Approximate Measurements:
Painting: 19½" x 27¾"   (49.5cm x 70.5cm)
Silk Scroll: 23" x 50¼"   (58.8cm x 127.5cm)
Width of Wooden Scroll Roller: 26¾"   (67.8cm)

Information about caring for your new Wall Scroll


Good Luck Blue Dragon Wall Scroll

The Chinese Title is "Jiang Fu Ren Jian".

Good Luck Blue Dragon - Chinese Wall Scroll close up view

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

To break down the artist's title:

Jiang = Coming Down

Fu = Good Luck or Good Fortune

Ren = Mankind

Jian = Space

So the title means this dragon brings good fortune down to you from heaven.

About the Artist:

This artist's name is Li Yu-Jun from near Jinan City in the Shandong Province of Northern China. She was born in 1963 and started painting at an early age. Taking inspiration from famous artists of China in the beginning, she honed her skills and developed her own style over the years.

While she has dabbled in many subjects, her specialties are dragons as well as birds & flowers.

It was only by chance that I found her. I was seeking some new styles of dragons finding out just how hard it is to find good dragon artists. I happened to mention my dragon art frustrations to the manager of the gallery in Jinan that handles Yin Yi-Qiu's artwork (my favorite tiger artist). She immediately knew the perfect artist for what I was seeking. We arranged all the details for what I was looking for, and a month later several wonderful paintings were ready for mounting.


About the artwork:

This dragon painting was done on high-quality xuan paper (often called rice paper). To get the deep and vibrant colors that you see, the artist had to paint in multiple layers (only the best xuan paper can be used for this technique - otherwise the colors would become muddy).

It takes a long time to complete one of these paintings with all of the painstaking detail.

When finished, and delivered to our studio in Beijing, it was mounted by hand to the silk scroll that you see above.



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Typical Gallery Price: $230.00

Your Price:
US$99.88U.S. Dollars

GBP £60.62British Pounds
Euro €67.42Euro
Canadian $107.03Canadian Dollars
Australian $109.88Australian 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:

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.

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