Sichuan Wall Art

35 creative works found

  • Chinese opera show in Chengdu, China

  • A Tibetan village in Sichuan Province. I hope this village is still ok. It wasn’t far from the center of the earthquake that struck Sichuan.

  • This illustration was done for the quake survivors in Sichuan, China. The meaning of this illustration is two-fold: First, I imagine if there were a huge panda (Sichuan is very well known for their pandas), so huge that it was able to absorb all the effects of the quake, people could have been enjoying lives peacefully. Second, the panda signifies the rescuers, supporters, donators from everywhere, they work together to give the victims and the survivors peace.

  • A shrine in one of many temples found on the way to the top of Emei Shan. Sichuan province, China.

  • SICHUAN EARTHQUAKE 2008 – ALL PROFIT FROM SALES MADE WITHIN ‘NOVEMBER 2008’ TO ‘NOVEMBER 2009’ WILL BE DONATED TO CHARITY FOCUSED ON THE EARTHQUAKE VICTIMS AND CHINA. At first, this merely started as a design school project, focusing around charity posters for the victims of the earthquake in China, Sichuan, in 2008. / However, after much work, and severe interest from teachers and students alike, I decided I wanted to sell this as a poster, donating all profits i make from it to the earthquake victims (and if not possible, to charity in china). After a lot of work, I managed to get the rights to sell this picture as a poster. And so here it is. Its raining bricks… and a kid is standing with an umbrella. Just like all the effort put into saving the victims of the earthquake, it is by far inadequate for what it is up against. The lights in the sky… is it the fallen stars from the chinese flag, or perhaps the souls of the victims that may have died in that very building. And is the kid even alive, or is he a ghost or angel, standing and watching over the dead? And even in all this disaster, is there a little ray of hope? Show your support for the Sichuan earthquake victims, and keep them in your hearts and minds. - Philip Zeplin / www.mentalmirage.com/blog

  • Jiuzhaigou nature reserve, Sichuan Province, China Oct 2008 / Leica R9, Elmarit-R 2.8/19mm / Fuji Velvia 50

  • Jiuzhaigou nature reserve, Sichuan Province, China Oct 2008 / Leica R9 Vario-Elmarit 2.8-4.5/28-90mm ASPH / Reala 100

  • Monkey halfway up to Mt. Emei, Sichuan, China. Photo taken 2006. No digital enhancements.

  • Monkey halfway up Mt. Emei, Sichuan China.

  • Monkey in the snow on Mt. Emei, Sichuan China. Photo taken late 2006.

  • Three monkeys sitting in the snow on Mt. Emei, Sichuan China. Photo taken late 2006.

  • A tourist is being carried by porters up this trail to the summit of Emei Shan in Sichuan province, China; on a rainy day.

  • Dujiangyan Irrigation System is a beautiful park near Chengdu China. You can walk around for hours seeing the temples and hiking over the bridges and the see wonders of the architecture.

  • Dujiangyan Irrigation System (wiki it !)

  • Dujiangyan Temple, Sichuan Province. Near Chengdu China, / 2008

  • A massive, 72-metre-tall Buddha image, carved into a rockface by a river in Leshan, Sichuan, China, has calmed the turbulent waters for more than 1000 years. This photo was taken in 1982, on kodachrome slide film.

  • A scene from the “face-changing” sketch which is part of the traditional Sichuan Opera. This performance took place in Chengdu, Sichuan province, China.

  • In 1421, when Chinese mariner Zheng Ho built a fleet to sail to exotic lands, boats rowed with long oars and using square sails were plying the inland rivers and waterways, the major trading routes of China. This vessel, built in the same was as the boats of ancient China, fights the strong currents at the confluence of the Minjiang, Dadu and Qingyi rivers in Sichuan Province. At this point, rulers in the Tang Dynasty (618-807 AD), carved a 71 metre-high Buddha image into the cliff bank to help calm the waters. This image in Leshan remains the world’s largest carved stone Buddha, and apparently the massive amount of rock that was removed during the carving and dumped into the river did help calm the currents and make shipping safer. I took this photograph in 1982 from the Leshan Buddha after spending a night at the monastery there. Taken with Nikon camera and lenses, kodachrome slide film. The original slide was quite dirty, and I have tried to clean the scan as well as possible.

  • The reserve in the Sichuan with its nursery was a wonderful place where chinese took care of the endangered pandas. Unfortunately, since that time the reservehas been destroyed by the recent earthquake and the pandas (safe) were put in different zoos. I do hope they will restore everything as it was very helpful to the animals.

  • Taken before the last earthquake in sichuan.

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