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Special 104 Famous Chinese Paintings on Moon–shaped Fans Postage Stamps (Issue of 1974)

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Stamp SN D104
Stamp Name Special 104 Famous Chinese Paintings on Moon–shaped Fans Postage Stamps (Issue of 1974)
Stamp Cat Standard Special Stamps
Stamp Cat Mammals, Flowers, Vegetables, Calligraphy & Paintings
Issue date 1974-08-14
Suspersion date
Dimension of stamps(mm.) 33.6 x 48.4
Size of souvenir Sheet (mm.)
Printer Joh.Enscheden Zonen,Holland
Drawer
Designer
Photographer Liu Pao-chin
Engraver
Creative Director
Sheet composition 5×4
Print color
Process Photogravure
Paper Photogravure stamp paper
Back
Perforation 13 x 12 1/2
  Four fan pictures, painted by the artists of the Sung dynasty (960-1279 A.D.), were selected from the National Palace Museum collections as central designs of this set of stamps. This series consists of four denominations: 1.00, 2.50, 5.00 and 8.00, depicting Wei Sheng's Crape Myrtle, Hsu Ti's White Cabbage and Insects, Li Ti's Hibiscus and Rock, and Wu Ping's Pomegranates, respectively.  The fan originated during three ancient dynasties, Hsai, Shang and Chou, and was widely used in the Sung dynasty.The fan used at that time was the silk fan which later became the moonshaped fan. While Emperor Huei Tzung of the Sung dynasty was on the throne, he himself painted pictures on fans, so silk fans became very popular, were plentiful and beautifully done. The four fan pictures adopted for this issue are silk fans, all vitally alive, elegant, and lovely. The silk fan, round in shape, is the symbol of reunion (Chinese word 〝round〞 also means reunion), and has long been used by writers and painters as the subject matter of their chosen master work.