Noble Beauty | Sold
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$1,300.00
$1,300.00
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This beautiful original painting is 11 inches tall by 9.5 inches wide unframed and is produced using watercolors, acrylic, gouache on Arches watercolor paper. The price includes custom framing designed by the artist, Caroline Young.
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Noble Beauty Story
At the end of the Han Dynasty (early 3rd century AD), China entered the tumultuous Three Kingdoms, Six Dynasties period, which lasted several hundred years. Warlords seized power and established their own spheres of influence, each plotting against the other. Cao Pi, son of the infamous general Cao Cao, became the first emperor of Wei. Upon seizing power, he claimed the beautiful Zhen Hou as his empress. Unbeknownst to him, Zhen Hou had already met and fallen in love with his younger brother, Cao Zhi.
Zhen Hou and Cao Zhi met many times over the years to lament their separation. Yet they never betrayed the emperor. After bearing him two sons, Zhen Hou was replaced in the emperor’s affections by another. When she voiced her bitter resentment, she was ordered by Cao Pi to commit suicide.
One evening, as Cao Zhi was traveling alongside the Lo River, there appeared before him a beautiful woman, who bore a striking resemblance to his beloved Zhen Hou. He hurried up to greet her, but before he could reach her, she vanished, leaving behind a single gold earring. With deep foreboding in his heart, he rushed to the capital, where he learned of Zhen Hou’s death. In deep anguish and sorrow, he sat down and poured out his heart in the form of a poem, Lo Shen Fu, a classic that has withstood the test of time.
At the end of the Han Dynasty (early 3rd century AD), China entered the tumultuous Three Kingdoms, Six Dynasties period, which lasted several hundred years. Warlords seized power and established their own spheres of influence, each plotting against the other. Cao Pi, son of the infamous general Cao Cao, became the first emperor of Wei. Upon seizing power, he claimed the beautiful Zhen Hou as his empress. Unbeknownst to him, Zhen Hou had already met and fallen in love with his younger brother, Cao Zhi.
Zhen Hou and Cao Zhi met many times over the years to lament their separation. Yet they never betrayed the emperor. After bearing him two sons, Zhen Hou was replaced in the emperor’s affections by another. When she voiced her bitter resentment, she was ordered by Cao Pi to commit suicide.
One evening, as Cao Zhi was traveling alongside the Lo River, there appeared before him a beautiful woman, who bore a striking resemblance to his beloved Zhen Hou. He hurried up to greet her, but before he could reach her, she vanished, leaving behind a single gold earring. With deep foreboding in his heart, he rushed to the capital, where he learned of Zhen Hou’s death. In deep anguish and sorrow, he sat down and poured out his heart in the form of a poem, Lo Shen Fu, a classic that has withstood the test of time.