Ma Ta Yan Fei, also known as Ma Long Chao Que, is an outstanding representative of bronze art in the Eastern Han Dynasty. A swift horse is galloping, strong and handsome, with its head held high, its tail cocked, its mouth screaming, its legs flying and a bird standing under its right hind hoof. The bird spread its wings and looked back in surprise. Everything happened in an instant, but it gave people a very broad imagination. Ancient artisans in China used the artistic technique of combining realism with romanticism, combined galloping horses and flying birds wonderfully with rich imagination, ingenious ideas and skillful skills, set off the swift speed of galloping horses with swift flying birds, and combined the unrestrained trend of galloping horses with its simple and stable mechanical structure. It has vigorous vitality and tenacious momentum, and it is also a symbol of the Chinese nation. Therefore, take it as a sign of tourism.
Mata Yan Fei was a bronze ware in the Eastern Han Dynasty. 1969 unearthed from the tomb of Zhang and his wife, the military commander guarding Zhangye in Leitai, Wuwei, Gansu Province. It fully embodies the superb casting technology of our ancestors.