Part of the Chinese Gold Panda-adjacent series of large-format cultural issues that China's mint expanded aggressively through the early 1990s, this coin draws from a classical Chinese painting tradition depicting children at play — a subject with deep roots in Song dynasty court art. The People's Bank authorized a run of these oversized gold pieces partly to satisfy growing demand from the Taiwanese and Hong Kong collector markets, where such cultural-theme issues commanded strong premiums.
Mintage for this type was tightly restricted, typically under 500 pieces for issues of this specification.
Part of the Chinese Gold Panda-adjacent series of large-format cultural issues that China's mint expanded aggressively through the early 1990s, this coin draws from a classical Chinese painting tradition depicting children at play — a subject with deep roots in Song dynasty court art. The People's Bank authorized a run of these oversized gold pieces partly to satisfy growing demand from the Taiwanese and Hong Kong collector markets, where such cultural-theme issues commanded strong premiums.
Mintage for this type was tightly restricted, typically under 500 pieces for issues of this specification.