Showing posts with label Chinese. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chinese. Show all posts

Doubts hang over Chinese vase record sale - Financial Times

Posted : Sunday, 10 April 2011

Have raised issues about the State of the sale of a previously undocumented Qing dynasty imperial vessel in a bungalow in Pinner, North London, which was sold to an anonymous buyer of Chinese for a price of Hammer of 43 million pounds sterling in a suburban house of auction in Novemberin the middle of reports that the client has not been paid.


The sale provides a new point of reference for the price of porcelain China, eclipsing the record £ 18. 2 m paid just weeks before by another vase, made by the emperor Qianlong (1711-99), in Hong Kong of Sotheby's by Alice Cheng business magnate. Also surpassed the previous record of any work of Chinese art, the Rmb 436 m ($ 63 m) paid by a displacement of calligraphy of 11th century sold at international auction of Poly in Beijing in June 2010.When asked, Peter Bainbridge, the auctioneer in of Ruislip Bainbridge that organized the sale on November 11, could not confirm that his client had paid, only indicating that he had been ordered by customers not to discuss the matter and pointing out that it was not unusual for any businessman to experience a delay in payment.


The appearance of a piece unique and completely unknown in such an unlikely scenario led many to speculate about the authenticity of the glass. "Isn't well defined to say that it is correct," explains the respected London dealer in Chinese art Giuseppe Eskenazi: "is not an obvious fake and several authorities familiar with, including the late Julian Thompson [a former Chairman of Sotheby's], believes in it completely." However, shortly after the sale, James Lally, a dealer in New York which sees the piece in London, said CNBC: "I am very skeptical..."?"There are a number of people that is not convincing." Between the bids on behalf of clients, however, was Nicholas Chow, Vice President of Asia Sotheby's and the Department of ceramics of head of Sotheby's China International and works of art.


No one disputes that collectors were willing to bid huge sums to the glass. Had come to the block with an estimate of 800,000 pounds sterling-£ 1. 2 m, although experts believed could be obtained more than 10 million pounds. 25 Million pounds, it record figure, there are still five bidders in the running. "It was an unbelievable price," says Mr Eskenazi, reflecting the thirst of works of art with an imperial mark or provenance Chinese.


Traditionally, it was the purity and simplicity of the first products of the Song dynasty that appealed to collectors in the East and West. The new generation of billionaires mainland China, however, preferred the showy, technical visits-of-force produced for the big three of the century XVIII emperors of the Qing dynasty. The buyer of the vessel Pinner opulent, complex is believed to be a wealthy collector of Beijing.


On Friday, Hong Kong Sotheby's revealed the Meiyintang of exceptional imperial porcelain, the latest collection of connoisseur European classic collection of Chinese ceramics.Waiting more than HK$ 710 m (91 million dollars) on 7 April, includes a glass of falangcai (exterior color) decorated with Golden pheasants (shown in the center of the main image), described by Nicholas Chow as "the last trophy of the Qing dynasty to any great collector of Chinese porcelain".Prior to this sale, suppliers, collectors, dealers and auctioneers are keen to know if in the vase Pinner really set a new record for a work of Chinese art or not.


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Fine Chinese ceramics and works of art to offer at Sotheby New York - daily of art

Posted : Friday, 8 April 2011

Fine Chinese ceramics and works of art to be offered in Sotheby in New York -A major battle painting of Imperial Nian rebellion 'Siege of Pingyu', of a set of eighteen paintings commemorating the victories over the Nian campaign, 1853-1868, by dynasty Qing Qingkuang et al, Guangxu period, ink and color on paperframed and under glass, 122 x 54 cm, 137(1) x 309.9 cm. est. 800,000-1.2 million dollars.New YORK, N.Y. On March 23, 2011 fine Chinese ceramics and works of art by Sotheby's sale offers excellent examples of Chinese painting, jades, furniture, ceramics and other works of art. The sale of 200 will much be part of a series of New York's Sotheby's auction week in Asia. The high point of sale is an important Imperial Nian rebellion battle painting "Site of Pingyu," by Qingkuang et al.,


the Qing dynasty, Guangxu period (EST. 800,000/1.2 million dollars). It's a set of 67 paintings, which have survived only a very small number that this extremely rare example. The painting depicts the siege and the recovery of the fortified town of Pingyu, who is being attacked by mounted troops of Qing. At a time when Imperial works continue to be particularly wanted, the auction includes a number of other imperial pieces to fine and rare great Imperial long table of 'zitan' (Tiaoan), Qing dynasty, Qianlong period (estimated $ 500/700,000) and glass a rare ' famille - Rose' Reticulated giratorioSello of Qianlong mark and period, (400/500 $000). Highlights include a number of jades from the collection of Robert Elliot Tod, a remarkable gentleman who built his collection at the beginning of the 20th century.


Paintings -In addition to the important battle painting auction also includes a portrait of a woman 'Fragrant Concubine' in the style of Lang shining (Giuseppe Castiglione), an oil painting on paper of 18 / 19th century, which is said to represent one of the favorite concubines of Emperor Qianlong (EST. $ 100/150 000).


Furniture -The furniture of the sale is led by a fine and rare great 'zitan' long table Imperial (Tiaoan) of the Qing dynasty, Qianlong period (estimated $ 500/700,000). The table was made of zitan rare and prized wood. The carved decoration of archaic style is unusual and has been influenced by Chinese bronzes. It reflects the Qianlong emperor interest and taste by the archaic works of art and objects created in this style. The table is one of the 23 lots of furniture and works of art in the submitted auction form a collection private run.


Academic objects -A little bit and well 'four hundred boys' Celadon Jade Brushpot, of the Qing dynasty, from the 18th century is the culminating point of a group of works from the collection of Robert Elliot Tod (EST. $ 300/400 000). Mr. Tod was born in Scotland, but became a patriotic American after emigrating in 1884 aged 17. He had a lifelong passion to navigate, competing in the America's Cup and the Karina in 1911 - reportedly, the largest in the world at the time of launch boat. Tod received the Navy cross between many accolades for her service in world war I. After the war he became the Commissioner of immigration for the port of New York: the first immigrant at Ellis Island overseas. It is likely that Robert Tod started collecting jade on the outside many visits and possibly inspired to do so by his friend Heber Bishop, the famous collector, whose collection of more than 1,000 jades was donated to the Metropolitan Museum in 1902. Uncle Tod has been an active director of the Museum from 1889 to 1909, and Tod himself was elected to the position of 'member of the Museum in perpetuity' in 1914. The sale includes 33 batches of this collection, of which the brushpot, with its attractive theme of the '100 boys' symbolizing the desire of many children, is the centerpiece.Highlights of the works of art in sales not collection of Tod include pair of rare Beijing enamel incense means, Mark Yongzheng period (40/60,000 dollars) and an unusual rhinoceros horn libation Cup, the Qing dynasty17/18 centuries (estimated $ 60/80,000).


Porcelain and ceramics -Highlights of the porcelain in selling rare ' famille - Rose' Reticulated swivel vase, Qianlong seal mark and period, (400/500 $000). Rotating vases as these come from a period when potters were ever more innovative and ambitious in his work. They are among the more complicated pieces produced in kilns for porcelain in Jingdezhen, demonstrating that both fine quality decorative and technical innovation.


A little and large 'Longquan' celadón 'Cong' - shaped vase, Song dynasty, displays many characteristics of the works of the era of Yuan, such as a refined elegance and surprising modernity (estimated $ 250/300,000). The piece is generally largest for a ceramics of the song and is covered in an attractive even celadon glaze. A rare 'was' decorated white satin it jar, Yongle Ming dynasty period dates from a period that is recognized as one of the most active for artisans in China whose work from this time is characterized by technical innovation and the rigorous pursuit of quality (EST. $ 400/600,000). Most include a ' famille - Rose' large 'hundred deer' glass, Qianlong mark and period (EST. $ 400/600,000) and 'A rare Famille Rose' figure of Amitayus, of the Qing dynasty, 18/19th ($ 80/120,000 est.)


Antiques -The antiques in the sale are led by a magnificent and Monumental sandstone head of Buddha, the Tang (EST. 400 dollars/500,000).The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site


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The Chinese Imperial porcelain: Meiyintang wonders - The Economist

Posted : Tuesday, 22 March 2011

ON 7 April, as part of its spring season in Hong Kong, Sotheby's sold 77 lots of Chinese imperial porcelain from the collection of Meiyintang. The announcement, last month the day on which the auction house held a sale of modernist art record in London, has attracted little public attention. But Chinese, news of the auction in Hong Kong followed the market of works of art were of a beam. For Meiyintang is regarded as the largest collection of Chinese treasures still in private hands in the West, a classified name along with Alfred Clark and Sir Percival David, passionate scholars, whose collections were among the most important ever made outside of the major museums in Beijing and Taipei.


Not long ago the Chinese were by the Communist Party celebrates the achievements of their ancestors. But with new fortunes by creating all the time now in China, dealers and collectors of Hong Kong and the Mainland have become enthusiastic buyers. They are thirsty of his own history, especially for anything that connects modern China with the glories of its imperial past. For the first time last year, according to a report published on 14 March, China has overtaken Great Britain to become the largest market of art in the world after America.


The demand for works of art Chinese has boosted prices, which in turn fresh treasures in the market. The traffic is almost entirely in a way. Chinese art in America and Europe is returning to China in the largest migration of culture from works European teachers traveled inexorably westward to America in the 19th century. Purchasers award rarity, quality and origin above all.


The Meiyintang collection will generate considerable Chinese interest for its quality and the secrecy surrounding its creation. Despite his fame, the collection of 2,000 rare pieces times has seen in its entirety and then only in private. Some works were exhibited in the British Museum in 1994 and at Monte Carlo two years later. The only public register is a monumental catalog by a German scholar, Regina Krahl. Although it extends to seven volumes, the catalog says nothing on which to join the collection.


Sotheby's, Ms Krahl and Giuseppe Eskenazi, distributor based in London who serves as Chief Adviser of Meiyintang, refused to identify those behind him. But The Economist has learned that the guiding hand is that of a Swiss businessman in 93 years of age, Stephen Zuellig. Born in the Philippines, Mr Zuellig and his brother, Gilbert, who died in 2009, spent 60 years building small Manila trading house based his father. Today the Zuellig group is a leading provider of services of the health care and pharmaceutical products in Asia and one of the largest companies in the region, with an annual turnover of about $ 12 million. The group, which still belongs to the family, has created a considerable fortune to the brothers.


The Zuelligs began to buy works of art Chinese in the 1950s by Helen Ling, the American wife of his partner of Singapore, which commercialized the Chinese porcelain in Shanghai. It was she who introduced them to Edward Chow, dominant Chinese coleccionista-distribuidor of post-war which was based in Hong Kong and later in Switzerland. At an early stage, the brothers were interested in the range of Chinese art, ancient to end of imperial porcelain bronzes. But they split their specialties by date: Gilbert concentrated on early ceramics from the Neolithic to the Song and Stephen dynasty porcelain of the Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties.


They chose the name Meiyintang, which means "Hall between rosebeds" in Mandarin, but also is a play on the Meienberg in Rapperswil, Swiss roots Southeast of Zurich which his grandfather purchased in 1912, where both brothers maintain a home and Stephen Zuellig shows its treasures in an underground Gallery for a long time.


The Zuelligs sought the best specialty stores, including Priestley and Ferraro for first works. Mr Eskenazi focused in later periods, and over a quarter-century, sold (or acquired on your behalf) pieces of more than 160. But it was Chow, a collector who inspired affection combined with a degree of astonishment, that he was influential in the Zuelligs.


Three fundamental criteria guided purchases: rarity of the work, the quality of its decoration and the condition of the piece. As a general rule, particularly with the treasures of the Qing dynasty, three complejos-dimensional pieces, such as vases, takes precedence over more utilitarian cups and bowls, with flat, being smaller and less desirable objects plates. Of course, the Zuelligs were not only collectors to implement these principles, but he is said to they have been particularly rigorous in the application. It is not enough that a work is rare or important; each piece that bought also had to have a personal aesthetic. "They bought both with the heart as the head," said Nicolas Chow, Sotheby's director in charge of the sale, which is also the grandson of Edward Chow.


The auction of next month is expected to be the first of many that focus, at least for the moment, the Yuan, Ming and Qing ceramics collected by Stephen Zuellig. Select what to include in this initial sale, Mr Zuellig has chosen pieces that represent a microcosm of the entire collection, ranging from the Yuan dynasty that began in the 13th century to the glories of the reign of the Qianlong emperor and his hijoJiaqing who died in 1820.


Most important are the early Ming goods cobalt blue and red copper decoration under the enamel, the monochrome Ming and Qing pieces and porcelain enamel early Qing if famille - Verte and famille - rose. Many of the works are unique. When Mr Eskenazi held an exhibition of seven ships of "peachbloom" of the Qing dynasty in 2006, Mr Zuellig bought two more rare pieces, a waterpot, and a "glass of three strings". He had examples of others. The Group of Meiyintang (pictured above) is estimated to sell next month for 50 million dollars HK-70 m ($ 6. 4 m - 9 m). Blue and white of Mr Zuellig Chenghua "Palace Bowl" can have a clear white interior, but the exterior decoration, with its large clusters of vine of melon, all painted in a watery blue and each subtly different, is the work of Chenghua at its best. Small surprise that Sotheby's estimates the bowl will be sold for 80 million dollars HK-120 m.


Similarly, the glass of eight inches (20 cm) painted with pheasants seems quite normal until compared with others of the same type. Each example is different, but only in the Zuellig Mr pheasant vase see you the combination of cream enamels, birds placed looking by far one of the other and yet a large part of an entire landscape and the subtle coloration as if became the painting on silk, instead of porcelain. Purchased in Hong Kong at the height of the Asian crisis in 1997 for HK$ 9. 9 m, and then a record for Qing porcelain, the Meiyintang pheasant vase now estimated 180 million dollars HK-300 m.


Every primary auction starts a new collection. With rare exceptions, Chinese purchases during the last decade has been a case of buying what is fashionable and expensive instead of collecting aesthetic passion and scholarly knowledge. Zuelligs Meiyintang porcelain is much a European collection of a particular flavour. China has some museums extraordinary, but not old collectors for new buyers to emulate. This will change over time, and the new private collections in China soon may be so unique in its way, as the Meiyintang is now.


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