The original painter of the "Running Horse" stamp is Xu Beihong, a master of modern Chinese painting, who is known as the first person to draw a horse in the Millennium. His "Running Horse Map" has shot sky-high prices for many times, which is priceless. 20 1 1, Beijing Spring Auction, Xu Beihong's "Running Horse Map" sold 24 1.5 million; 20 10, Beijing rongbao auction No.587, with a reserve price of 5 million yuan, was finally sold at16.8 million yuan. The original stamp sheetlet, "Six Horses", has become a national first-class cultural relic, and is now in the Xu Beihong Memorial Hall in Beijing, with an estimated value of over 1 100 million!
Xu Beihong's "Running Horse" is splashed with ink, fresh and beautiful, full of the charm of Chinese painting. Looking at the full picture of "Running Horse" stamps, a horse with different shapes and galloping forward seems to break through the paper and be beautifully designed. The sheetlet is printed in five colors. When proofing, the ink color is constantly adjusted against the real Zi Ling, so that the color effect of the edge decoration is very close to the real Zi Ling, which can be confused. Many people mistakenly think that Zi Ling is printed on the sheetlet. After the stamps were issued, they were welcomed and loved by stamp collectors. In the 1980 National Philatelic Federation's best stamp selection activity in the 30 years since the founding of the People's Republic of China, the "Running Horse" stamp and sheetlet were both rated as the best special stamps.
T28 "Running Horse" has a circulation of 2.5 million sets and a sheetlet of 250,000 sets, with a small circulation. It has been 35 years since it was issued, during which it consumed a lot of money and became a rare stamp treasure.