Draft:Twelve Landscape Screens: Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox Artwork

{{Infobox Artwork

| image_file=Twelve_Landscape_Screens_by_Qi_Baishi.jpg

| image_file=Twelve_Landscape_Screens_by_Qi_Baishi.jpg

| image_size=300px

| image_size=

| title=Twelve Landscape Screens

| title=Twelve Landscape Screens

| other_language_1=Chinese

| other_language_1=Chinese

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| year=1925

| year=1925

| medium=[[Ink brush|Ink brush on panel]]

| medium=[[Ink brush|Ink brush on panel]]

| height_metric=180{{efn|name=Measurement|Measurement for a singular panel}}

| height_metric=180{{efn|name=Measurement|Measurement for a singular panel}}

| width_metric=47{{efn|name=Measurement}}

| width_metric=47{{efn|name=Measurement}}

| height_imperial=71{{efn|name=Measurement}}

| height_imperial=71{{efn|name=Measurement}}


Revision as of 02:18, 11 February 2026

Twelve Landscape Screens (Chinese: 山水十二條屏) is a set of ink brush panels painted by Qi Baishi in 1925 depicting rural Chinese villages alongside mountains and trees. The panels were sold at auction for $140.8 million USD in 2017, making them the most expensive Asian paintings ever sold.[1]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Measurement for a singular panel.

References

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