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Chinese Art News


June 4, 2008- Museums set Stricker Guidelines for Acquiring Antiquities. "The new policy advises museums that they “normally should not” acquire a work unless solid proof exists that the object was outside its country of probable modern discovery before 1970, or was legally exported from its probable country of modern discovery after 1970. That is the year Unesco ratified a landmark convention prohibiting traffic in illicit antiquities, and it has become a widely accepted cutoff for antiquities collecting." (Read More.)

April 7 -10, 2007- Christie’s (Hong Kong) will hold a Spring Chinese art auction sale in the exhibition center. Xu Beihong’s “Put Down Your Whip” (oil painting, 1939) which has been unknown for the past ten years, will be the star of this auction.

March 17-18, 2007- China Guardian Auction House in Beijing will auction a collection of twenty fine ceramics from the permanent collection of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.

Sept. 8, 2006 -Famous Chinese Artist Wu Guanzhong Accused a Beijing Auction House of Selling the Forgeries of His Paintings. Distintuished Chinese painter Wu Guanzhong pointed his figure at a Beijing auction house that is planning on auctioning what they call "Wu Guangzhong's Chinese Paintings." The auction house cancelled the sale because the artist testified that none of the paintings for sale was of his own hand.

July 20, 2006 - Classical Chinese Paintings Sold for Millions of Dollars in China. "Walking in the Fall Forest" by Chen Hongshou of the Ming dynasty (1368-1644) was sold for RMB1,320,000 (US$165,000); a landscape by Gong Xian of the Qing dynasty (1644-1911) was sold for RMB1,320,000 (US$165,000); Lu Yanshao's "Ageless Spring River View" in the style of Song masters reached a price of RMB1,150,000 (US$143,750); and Huang Qian's "Fuchun Mountains after Huang Gongwang" of the Yuan dynasty (1269-1368) was sold for a price of RMB1,078,000 (US$134,750).


Chinese Art Market Watch


Prices for the Best Chinese Art, Old And New, Have Skyrocketed. Chinese economic growth is the driving force behind the volatile Chinese art market. Most important is the blossoming of a new generation of collectors in China itself. Five years ago, the art market's center of gravity shifted eastward: more Chinese paintings, old and new, are now purchased by Chinese buyers than by those outside of China. The major international auction houses have opened their own operations on Chinese soil. The global economy and a local rise in income mean that more and more Chinese citizens are taking an interest in art, for both aesthetic and economic reasons. These Chinese art collectors exert a powerful influence on the size and shape of the market.

Cheap Attempts at Classical Chinese Paintings Are Trying to Meet the Demand for High-quality Chinese Art. Although many sellers claim Zhang Daqian as an inspiration, their actual methods as well as the results are second-rate or worse. The supply of poor-quality reproductions is sometimes generated through assembly-line reproduction. Some paintings are reproduced mechanically in the fast-growing economic zones, largely for unwitting tourists or for cheap sale through the less reputable internet galleries.

Chinese Buyers Constitute a Significant force in the Purchase of Classical Chinese Paintings, not just in Hong Kong but in New York, London, Amsterdam and Paris. Sales at China's ten leading auction houses topped US$1 billion in 2005, up from $100 million in 2000, according to published figures.


Chinese Art Market - Watch List

  • Paintings by female artists of the Ming and Qing dynasty (17th –early 20th century). Li Yin, Ma Quan, Qian Yulin, Liao Jiahui, Chou Zhu, Chen Shu (1660-1736), Liu Ru (1618-1644), Huang Yuanjie are leading female artists of the time.
  • Paintings by female entertainers of the Ming and Qing dynasty will be in demand. The leading artist in this category is Xue Susu of the Ming dynasty.  
  • Buddhist art objects, especially painting and sculptures, will do well, continuing their excellent performance in 2006.
  • Ancient paper money, such as certificates of exchange, is emerging in the market. The most popular ones are a rare set of eight specimens issued by the Chinese government of the Republic period, one of which sold for RMB528,000 (US$66,000) in 2006.
  • Scholarly objects, including bamboo carving, ink stones, and desks of rare wood, are hot.
  • Wood block prints have started to attract the attention of Chinese art collectors.

 

 

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