Sotheby's To Auction $40M+ Dr. Wou Kiuan Collection | Among the Greatest Collections of Chinese Art Remaining in Private Hands
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Auktion22.03.2022Wou Kiuan Collection
In 1968, Wou created a private gallery in his home titled the Wou Lien-Pai Museum, named in honor of his father. Located in a discreet corner of the southern British Isles, the Museum became a destination for collectors, academics, and visiting dignitaries, and Wou would delight in leading his visitors through the galleries, recounting stories of China’s glorious history. To this day, the Wou family has remained a conscientious custodian of the collection, loaning works to exhibitions and publishing a two-volume catalogue in 2011, thus continuing to educate future generations.
COLLECTION HIGHLIGHTS
HIGHLY IMPORTANT AND MAGNIFICENTLY CARVED SOAPSTONE SEAL CARVED FOR THE QIANLONG EMPEROR
Single-Lot Auction
Hong Kong – April 2022
Estimate Upon Request
Masterpieces of Qing porcelain and works of art will be offered in Hong Kong throughout 2022, including an important group of enamelled porcelains formerly in the Fonthill heirlooms. The Hong Kong chapter of the Wou Collection will kick off in April with a highly important and magnificently carved soapstone seal carved for the Qianlong emperor early in his reign, which bears the inscription Qianlong Yulan Zhibao (admired by his Majesty the Qianlong Emperor). The seal is found prominently impressed on countless important Chinese paintings including the two most revered classical masterpieces in the world, namely Fan Kuan’s Travellers. Among Mountains and Streams and Guo Xi’s Early Spring, both dating from the Northern Song Dynasty. No other imperial seal to have come to market appears on such a large number of historically important paintings.
A RARE ARCHAIC BRONZE RECTANGULAR VESSEL (FANGYI)
Late Shang dynasty, Anyang, 12th century BC.
Estimate $400/600,000
In form and design, the present fang yi represents Chinese bronze art at its height, when the Anyang style had reached its mature phase. Only a small number of further fang yi with related decoration, featuring birds below the rim and slight variations in design have been recorded, with others residing in prominent institutions such as the Shanghai Museum; and a fang yi in the British Museum from the Sedgwick Collection. The closest comparisons to the present example come from the tomb of Fu Hao, the only undisturbed Shang royal tomb discovered at Yinxu, the site of the late Shang capital in Anyang, Henan. Fu Hao was not only a consort of King Wu Ding, but a remarkable woman in her own right, serving as a military leader in several campaigns and probably also fulfilling the roles of a priestess. Dating from around 1200 BC, her tomb was generously furnished with exceptionally fine and rare bronzes.
Vessels of fang yi type have been variously interpreted as containers for food or wine, and could certainly have served for either function, however, are now generally considered to have been wine vessels.
A LARGE AND IMPORTANT IMPERIALLY-INSCRIBED PALE GREEN JADE 'LUOHAN' BOULDER
Qing dynasty, Qianlong period
Estimate $400/600,000
This jade boulder is remarkable for its exceptional carving of the luohan dramatically set against the backdrop of a rough stone grotto, its large overall size, and its imperial inscription. It represents a three-dimensional, sculptural version of a late Tang (618-907) painting which had particularly impressed the Qianlong Emperor. In 1757, the Qianlong Emperor visited the Shengyin Temple in Hangzhou, Zhejiang, where he saw a set of paintings depicting the Sixteen Luohan by the painter Guanxiu - a Chan monk famous for his paintings of Buddhist figures, which are known today mainly through later copies (832-912). He recorded that he had seen himself the masterpieces of Guanxiu and, as a devotee of Buddhism, studied their content and reordered and reattributed the paintings according to his own teacher’s interpretation of their sequence. He penned colophons on each painting and commissioned reproductions of the images with their new inscriptions in various media, including stone engravings, jade carvings and textiles. The Shengyin Temple was destroyed and the original set of Guanxiu’s Luohan paintings appears to be lost. However, we can assume that their basic style is preserved in the engravings commissioned by the Qianlong Emperor.
A MAGNIFICENT CARVED CINNABAR LACQUER ‘HIBISCUS’ DISH
Yuan/Early Ming dynasty, 14th century
Estimate $100/150,000
Appearing at auction for the first time in more than five decades, this large and exquisitely carved cinnabar lacquer dish appears to be unique, and no other dish with this design appears to be recorded. Stylistically, it can be placed into the peak period of Chinese lacquer craftsmanship, in the late Yuan (1279-1368) to early Ming dynasty (1368-1644). The decoration is unusual in being limited to three blooms among foliage, a design more typically seen on much smaller dishes and boxes. The ample size of the present dish allowed the flowers to be rendered in magnificent large scale. Although hibiscus is popular in China, the flower is surprisingly rarely depicted in Chinese art. On the present dish, the depiction of the hibiscus flowers includes a charming naturalistic detail hardly otherwise ever captured in artistic renderings of the motif: all three blooms show a tiny five-pointed ‘floret’ protruding from the petal tips, representing the stigma that receives the pollen in the centre of the bloom. The carving style is remarkable for its boldness, clear layout, overall soft, well-polished finish, and smooth, rounded outlines of the various elements of the flowers.
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