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Archives | Subscribe | Share: I found this via TYWKIWDBI, a great blog which stands for "Things You Wouldn't Know if We Didn't Blog Intermittently" -- right up my alley, given this newsletter. The proprietor there shared the video linked to below, and I set off investigating this story. -- Dan

China's Oil Painting Village You may have notice that hotels have the same oil painting in each room. Or that you can get a replica Starry Night or Mona Lisa (like the one above) for roughly the price of a high-end Kindle. If you think that the oil painting reproduction game is a cottage industry, you're almost correct: it's a village industry. In this case, it's the village of Dafen, China. Founded in the mid-1990s by a businessman and about twenty artists, Dafen is now home to 5,000 artists -- who, collectively, churn out over 5 million paintings a year. That's more than half of the oil paintings produced in the entire world each year. Most of the artwork is entirely legal, at least under Chinese law. Works fall out of copyright protection after fifty years, so the non-original work such as the two featured above are free and clear. And while they can retail for hundreds of dollars in the United States, the artwork -- which quite literally on every street corner in Dafen -- goes for about $40 for even the most sought-after works in the area.



The quality of the work? It's very good. Not perfect, of course, but these are made by artists, not mere painters. All of the (re-)creators are trained at art academies; to the extent that the quality suffers, it is because they are expected to produce dozens of replicas weekly (per Wikipedia).



More photos of this self-replicating museum are available at RandomWire, and this video on the village and its mini-industry is available via Al Jazeera's YouTube channel.



Bonus fact : Reproducing three or more oil paintings a week means long, grueling hours. Such hours would preclude these painters from taking up a very odd hobby demonstrated by a man in the UK -- wiggling one's way into the background of news telecasts. Paul Yarrow spends an incredible amount of time doing exactly that, appearing in the backdrop of almost two dozen television broadcasts over the last year or so.

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