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Classical Chinese painting sells for $49 million

By Lin Qi (China Daily Europe) Updated: 2017-03-26 11:12

A 13th-century classical Chinese scroll painting fetched $49 million from an anonymous bidder at a New York auction recently.

The ink brush painting titled Six Dragons once belonged to Emperor Qianlong of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). It was taken to Japan in the early 20th century and then became part of the collection of the Osaka-based Fujita Museum.

The museum auctioned off 31 Chinese works of art in its collection, including Six Dragons, at Christie's in New York. The sale raised funds to help refurbish the museum.

Six Dragons was created by Chen Rong, an official painter during the Song Dynasty (960-1279). He was once widely known for excellence in painting dragons, but is little known today because he is only briefly mentioned in historical documents.

 Classical Chinese painting sells for $49 million

Part of Six Dragons, a painting that once belonged to Emperor Qianlong. Provided to China Daily

In his vivid Six Dragons, Chen created fierce dragons that move freely through waves and mist.

Ji Tao, an art market observer in Beijing, says Chen preferred to paint after getting slightly drunk.

"He splashed extensive ink to portray seas, clouds and strange rocks by which he highlighted the strong motion and volume of dragons, thereby conveying a mystical feeling."

Chen's dragon paintings also reveal his political views and ambitions, Ji says.

Twenty-two paintings signed by Chen Rong are in museums and private collections worldwide, with 11 of them in the United States and Japan, according to Zhu Wanzhang, a researcher at the National Museum of China.

Beijing's Palace Museum houses two of Chen's calligraphy pieces.

The dragon painting is cataloged in Shiqu Baoji, a prominent inventory of top-notch Chinese paintings and calligraphic works in the imperial Qing collection. It was among a large number of Chinese works of art that were sold by aristocrats following the collapse of the Qing Dynasty.

The sale of works from the Fujita collection included five other classical paintings cataloged in Shiqu Baoji, dating to the Tang (618-907), Song and Yuan (1271-1368) dynasties, which witnessed the glory of Chinese art.

Also auctioned were four 3,000-year-old Chinese bronze pieces. A wine vessel excavated in Anyang, Henan province, brought in the most, selling for $37.2 million (34.6 million euros; 30.1 million).

The auction's sales totaled $260 million and attracted bidders from around the world. The sale drew several prominent collectors of Chinese art, including British dealer Giuseppe Eskenazi; Robert Chang from Hong Kong; Robert Tsao, a Taiwan-born entrepreneur; and Wang Wei, who co-founded Shanghai's Long Museum with billionaire husband Liu Yiqian.

Rebecca Wei, president of Christie's Asia, said many bidders came from the Chinese mainland, Hong Kong and Taiwan, and new buyers, mostly entrepreneurs, were active in bidding because they knew it was a rare opportunity to acquire such works.

linqi@chinadaily.com.cn

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