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Chinese Contemporary Sales Return to the West

June 13, 2013 by Marion Maneker

Zhang Xiaogang, Boy (Bloodline Series) (£350-450k)

Late in the last decade, the auction houses made a conscious decision to relocate Chinese Contemporary art sales to Hong Kong in both an offensive and defensive move. The goal was to generate more domestic interest in the artists of Asia among the newly wealthy collectors of China. But the defensive side of the move seemed to recognize a slowing interest among Western collectors in living Chinese artists. Some prominent collections amassed by Westerners were sold.

Curiously, works by Chinese Contemporary artists have begun to seep back into sales in New York and London. Jing Daily points out that London’s upcoming Contemporary art sales contain a number of important Chinese works. The Zhang Xiaogang above will be offered in Sotheby’s Contemporary Art Evening sale. The auction houses anticipate strong competition from Western and Chinese buyers; and they’re coming into London with momentum built in Hong Kong a few weeks ago:

Christie’s Hong Kong did particularly well in the spring sales, coming within a hair of its high estimate of $22,866,350 with a total take of $22,628,450. Christie’s also sold the highest-priced lot of the season, Zeng Fanzhi’s Society, which went for $3.38 million. In all, 14 of the artist’s works were sold, generating $10 million, accounting for 13 percent of the overall Chinese contemporary art sales for the season, and creating high expectations for the work now coming on the block in London.

The prominence of Chinese artists at the upcoming sale reflects London’s position as a growing global hub for Chinese contemporary art, as European collectors continue to gain interest and wealthy Chinese buyers travel abroad in ever-increasing numbers. It’s a trend that will be augmented in coming years by the continued mobility of China’s wealthy, and the construction of the recently announced new Chinese financial district at London’s Royal Albert Dock.

Contemporary Chinese Art Looms Large In Sotheby’s London Lineup (Jing Daily)

Frahm: Beijing No. 2 in Contemporary Art

July 19, 2012 by Marion Maneker

The Chinese auction house China Guardian will be holding sales in Hong Kong this October, according to ArtInfo. British art advisor Michael Frahm points out this week on ArtDaily.org that Beijing has become the second center for Contemporary art sales:

If we drill down further into China ’s regional markets, we can see that Beijing in particular is performing incredibly well. The city is now second in the global market for contemporary art and is competing with New York, particularly at the highest end of the market, where the level of quality and prices have exploded over the last decade. Hong Kong , meanwhile, has emerged as the new epicenter of the global arts market. […] Works by Chinese artists are now contributing more heavily than ever before to the overall economic growth in the art market. Today, five Chinese artists feature in the world’s top 10 contemporary artists by revenue. Zeng Fanzhi (€39.2m), Zhang Xiaogang (€30m), Chen Yifei (€283m), Wang Yidong (€16.2m) and Zhou Chunya (€14.5m) now each feature, ahead of the likes of Damien Hirst and Takashi Murakami. […]

The Chinese art market relies too heavily on the major auction houses that I have already touched upon. The dominance of the auction houses in China is far greater than that in Europe or in America . Their power and influence means that the market can, at times, lack diversity, as they are able to control much of what is brought to market. This is partly driven by a powerful culture of ‘trophy buying’ that exists amongst many Chinese buyers, which leaves a lack of enthusiasm for dealing privately. Buyers here like to be seen to be spending large sums of money, particularly for the most iconic works, and the best way to do so is to buy in person at auction. […]

This culture of trophy buying also highlights a somewhat misplaced focus in China on the lucrative investment that buying art might represent. In 2011 art was in fact China ’s hottest investment. With a far more favourable rate of return on investment than the unstable stock or housing markets, more and more of the country’s wealthiest continue to explore alternative forms of investment and art is, it seems, becoming more attractive by the day. In 2011 China ’s two largest auction houses, China Guardian Auction Co and Poly International Auction Co recorded a 49% and 20% rise in turnover respectively year-on-year.

The Chinese contemporary art market has achieved a great deal, what’s next? (ArtDaily)

Bonham’s Single Owner Sale in Hong Kong = $11.6m

June 22, 2012 by Marion Maneker

In all the hubbub last month, Bonham’s noteworthy single owner sale in Hong Kong got lost in the mix. The auciton house sold HK$90.6m ($11.6m) worth of art, besting the estimates by 50%. All but one of the works was sold.

With that in mind, we’re posting the results here. All the Contemporary art lots sold, evidence of the strength in the market for Chinese masters of 20th Century abstract art. 

15 works by Chu Teh-Chun and Zao Wou-Ki total realized: HKD 63.3 million / 8.1 million USD (estimate: HKD 26.45- 37.3 million / 3.4 -4.8 million USD) 

12 Imperial Chinese works of art total realized: HKD 27.75 million / 3.5 million USD

Christie’s HK Cont Day =HK$97m ($12.5m)

May 28, 2012 by Marion Maneker

  1. Shang Yang, Hearth (HK$800-1.2m) HK$6.38m ($825k)
  2. Zeng Fanzhi, Mask (HK$2.5-3.5m) HK$5m ($655k)
  3. Fang Lijun, 1998.3.1 HK$2.5-3.5m) HK$4.22m ($546k)
  4. Zeng Fanzhi, Mask Series No. 11 (HK$2-3m) HK$3.62m ($468k)
  5. Liu Ye, Angels in Flight (HK$1-1.5m) HK$3.38m ($437k)
  6. Ding Yi, Apperance of Crosses (HK$800-1.2m) HK$1.82m ($235k)
  7. Shang Yang, H Land-13 (HK$300-500k) HK$1.46m ($189k)
  8. Yan Ping, Spring Flavour & Rabbit (HK$800-1m) HK$2.66m ($344k)
  9. Lia Dahong, The Honeymoon (HK$180-260k) HK$2.54m ($328k)

Sotheby’s HK Cont Asia = $211m ($27.3m)

April 2, 2012 by Marion Maneker

  1. Zhang Xaiogang, Bloodline, Big Family— Family No. 2 (HK$25-35m) HK$52m
  2. Fang Lijun, 1993.4 (HK$18-25m) HK$28.6m
  3. Liu Wei, A Good Dog (HK$12-15m) HK$14m
  4. Wang Guangyi, Mao Zedong AO (HK$4-6m) HK$8.42m
  5. Jai Aili, It’s Not Only You Who is Pale (HK$2.5-3.8m)HK$6.6m
  6. Fang Lijun, 1998 No. 2 (HK$2.5-3.5m) HK$4.46m
  7. Wang Guangyi, Post-Classical Series, After Mona Lisa (HK$2-3m) HK$4.22m
  8. Fang Lijun, 1997 No. 11 (HK$3-4m) HK$4.1m
  9. Fang Lijun, Dream of Peace (HK$2.8-3.5m) HK$4.1m
  10. Wenda Gu, Drama of Two Culture Formats Merge (HK$1.9-2.5m) HK$3.98m
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