Xiang Li Art Store
Empress Wei (Tang Dynasty), Stretched Canvas Print, Ready to Hang, Installed with D-Ring and Wires, Watercolor Art Lunar New Year Gift, Peony Flower, Roses, Silk Scarf
Empress Wei (Tang Dynasty), Stretched Canvas Print, Ready to Hang, Installed with D-Ring and Wires, Watercolor Art Lunar New Year Gift, Peony Flower, Roses, Silk Scarf
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Originally designed and painted on silk by Xiang Li, this artwork is printed on high-quality stretched or rolled canvas prints. Made with carefully hand-stretched fabric on a wooden frame, our prints will showcase your work in bright, stunning colors that will last for decades.
Printing Method: Giclee, Eco-Solvent Inkjet
Both framed and unframed canvas is ready to hang with D-ring already installed
Additional canvas prints, framed canvas, frame colors are available upon request.
Friendly suggestion: our mockups are created based on actual measurement. However, please carefully measure your space to ensure the paintings can fit and look accurately in your unique environment. Thank you!
Printing Method: Giclee, Eco-Solvent Inkjet
Both framed and unframed canvas is ready to hang with D-ring already installed.
About the empress: Empress Wei was the second wife of Emperor Zhongzong. During his second reign, she wielded significant influence, effectively controlling governmental affairs without holding the formal title of regent. Emulating her mother-in-law, Wu Zetian, Empress Wei aspired to seize power. Following Emperor Zhongzong's death in 710—traditionally believed to be a poisoning orchestrated by Empress Wei and her daughter, Princess Anle—she assumed the role of empress dowager and declared herself regent for the young Emperor Shang. Her regency was short-lived; after just seventeen days, she was overthrown and killed in a coup led by Emperor Zhongzong's nephew, Li Longji (later Emperor Xuanzong), and his sister, Princess Taiping.
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