Press Release Hong Kong For Immediate Release

Hong Kong | Winnie Tang | +852 2822 8129 | winnie.tangsothebys.com

New York | Dan Abernethy | dan.abernethy@sothebys.com | London | Matthew Floris | matthew.floris@sothebys.com

SOTHEBY'S HONG KONG PRESENTS FINE CHINESE PAINTINGS SPRING SALE 2014 ON 7 APRIL

Highlighting

Zhang Daqian's Lotus in the Wind

Property from the Museum Of Modern Art, New York

(Est. HK$5 - 7 million / US$640,000 - 897,000)

- A Signature Splashed-Ink Lotus Work By The Artist From The 1960s -

Gao Qifeng's Roaring Lion

(Est. HK$1.8 - 2.5 million / US$230,000 - 320,000)

A Representative Work From The Lingnan School of Painting -

Also Featuring Important Private Collections From North America And Europe *********

Hong Kong Exhibition: 3 - 6 April 2014

Hong Kong, 18 March 2014 Sotheby's Hong Kong Fine Chinese Paintings Spring Sale 2014 will take place on 7 April at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre. Exquisite works by such modern Chinese artists as Zhang Daqian, Wu Changshuo, Qi Baishi, Fu Baoshi, Xu Beihong and Xie Zhiliu will be offered, many of which come from private collections in Europe and North America and are fresh to the market. The sale will feature more than 400 lots in total, estimated in excess of HK$130 million / US$16.7 million*.

C.K. Cheung, Head of Sotheby's Chinese Paintings Department said: "This Spring, we continued to leverage on our unrivalled global network to assemble some of the most outstanding works from important private collections overseas. Headlining the sale is Zhang Daqian's Lotus in the Wind from the collection of Museum of Modern Art in New York. The painting exemplifies Zhang's transition from his freehand style to splashed-ink-and-colour technique and is one of the artist's most pivotal lotus-themed works from the 1960s. Regarded by the artist as an epitome of this genre, the work was on loan to a number of important exhibitions, including Exhibition of Paintings by Chang Da-Chien at Hirschl & Adler Galleries in 1963 and Chang Dai-Chien: A Retrospective Exhibition at the Center of Asian Art and Culture in 1972."
"Another highlight is Roaring Lion (pictured p1), an exceptional work by Gao Qifeng, one of the founders of the Lingnan School of Painting. The work once belonged to the private collection of Zhang Kunyi, student of Gao Qifeng, who brought with her a selection of Gao's paintings when she left China for the United States during the Second Sino-Japanese War, with Roaring Lion being the most representative of them all. Also worthy of note is Landscape in Afterglow, an outstanding splashed-colour masterpiece by Zhang Daqian from the collection of distinguished Chinese literature scholar Han Nan."

AUCTION HIGHLIGHTS

Property from the Museum Of Modern Art, New York, Sold to Benefit the Acquisitions Fund

Zhang Daqian (1899 - 1983)

Lotus in the Wind

1961, Ink on Paper, Hanging Scroll, 179.1 x 96.5 cm

Est. HK$5 - 7 million / US$640,000 - 897,000


Lotus in the Wind was a gift from Zhang Daqian to his good friend Dr Kuo Yu-shou, also known as Guo Zijie, who in turn donated the work to the Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1961. Kuo studied in France in his early years before returning to China, where he was offered a key appointment in the Nationalist government, which placed him in a position to form close ties with the art circle. Zhang and Kuo, both Sichuanese, became particularly close when the artist fled to Sichuan during the Second Sino-Japanese War. Following the change of political regime in China, Zhang Daqian left the country to reside abroad while Kuo stationed at a diplomatic post in Europe. From the mid-1950s to 1960s, Zhang travelled extensively in Europe and held exhibitions in a number of countries with the assistance of Kuo as his agent. The two then became very close friends. In 1961, Zhang Daqian painted this work during his sojourn in Japan and presented it as a gift to Kuo Yu-shou when he stayed at Kuo's residence in Paris later that year.

Lotus in the Wind is a signature splashed-ink lotus work by Zhang Daqian from the early 1960s, a period when the artist transformed from his freehand style to splashed-ink-and-colour technique. The

composition is simple and bold and the brushstrokes are free and unfettered, unveiling a magnanimous breadth of aesthetic vision. The application of ink in balanced shades, executed in a robust and exuberant manner, reveals the delicate beauty of nature.
This work was exhibited in 1963 at the Hirschl & Adler Galleries, one the earliest solo exhibitions of Zhang Daqian in the United States. In 1972, it was again featured at Chang Dai-Chien: A Retrospective Exhibition at the Centre of Asian Art and Culture in San Francisco. Its appearance in various important exhibitions attests to its significance in the artist's oeuvre.

An Important Splash Landscape By Zhang Daqian From The Collection Of Professor Patrick Hanan

Zhang Daqian (1899 - 1983)

Landscape in Afterglow

1968, Splashed Ink and Colour on Paper Mounted on Board, Framed, 95.2 x 58.5 cm

Est. HK$5 - 7 million / US$640,000 - 897,000


Developed in Zhang Daqian's advanced years when he was suffering from deteriorating eyesight, the splashed-ink-and-colour technique is a testimony to the Zhang's versatility and imagination and unique to works created in the final years of the artist's artistic career. Executed in 1968 with mesmerizing colour application, Landscape in Afterglow exemplifies the artist's technique in maturity. Heavy coats of pigments in azurite blue and malachite green are splashed on the scroll repeatedly to create large, compact rock forms, resulting in a composition aglow with a gem-like sparkle. At the top left corner is a slight touch of red, suggesting the glow of a setting sun. In the foreground, a reclusive scholar can be seen on a boat in the waning light amidst green foliage interspersed with red flowers. Landscape in Afterglow is rendered in a semi-abstract style and Zhang used figurative brushwork to highlight the scenery in ink. Its melding of traditional and inventive techniques further
reflects the artist's creativity and his painterly inspiration.

Qi Baishi1864 - 1957

An Assemblage of Fruits

Ink and Colour on Paper, Hanging Scroll, 68 x 33.5 cm (each) Estimate on request

Qi Baishi's four-panel paintings were mostly created in the 1920s and

1930s. Judging by its painting style and inscription, An Assemblage of Fruits was executed in the late 1930s or early 1940s. Featured in the work are four panels, each depicting a particular type of fruit, including lychees, grapes, cherries and loquats.
Each panel portrays a basket of fruits and is adorned with the image of a tree branch, replete with leaves and fruits similar to those in the basket. Instead of appearing identical, all these depictions complement each other, demonstrating Qi's meticulous visual judgment. Alternated between the images of lychees and cherries in seductive red tones on both ends, are the golden-yellow depictions of loquats and the purplish-green portrayals of grapes. The contrasts and vibrant relationship between colour and ink are reinforced with the varying degrees of force and speed by which the artist implements his brushstrokes.

Gao Qifeng (1889 - 1933)

Roaring Lion

1927, Ink On Paper, Hanging Scroll, 169.7 x 61 cm

Est. HK$1.8 - 2.5 million / US$230,000 - 320,000

In 1926, Gao Qifeng's painting of a male lion, which epitomises the revolutionary spirit of his times, was selected for the collection of the Sun Yat- Sen Memorial Hall. At the request of his students, Gao repainted the subject in the following year, resulting in this work. Executed in 1927, Roaring Lion is monumental in scale, focusing on a robust lion which occupies more than half of the scroll. Ferocious in appearance, the lion is an awesome sight to behold, its teeth exposed in a growl, its eyes iridescent and its giant paws lifted in a pounce. The creature looks ready to leap down from a boulder, with a striking force too mighty to resist. Every part of the lion, from its menacing look to the tiniest detail of its physique, such as the fur, sharp paws and its intense glare, are delicately portrayed, either with fine brushwork or colour washes, to a life-like effect.
In 1939, during the Second Sino-Japanese War, Gao's student Zhang Kunyi left for the United States bringing with her a fine selection of the artist's work to save them from the Japanese troops. The collection included some of the most representative works from the Lingnan School of Painting and the
present work tops them all in artistic significance.

Work of Xu Beihong from a European Private Collection

Xu Beihong

Horse

1948, Ink and Colour on Paper, Framed, 109 x 53.5 cm

HK$3.5 - 4.5 million / US$449,000 - 577,000

Horse was executed in 1948, but it was only two years later that Xu Beihong added the recipient's name and a greeting atop the painting, when it was intended as a gift for the renowned Czech sinologist Jaroslava Průška. Průška studied in China during the 1930s and devoted the second half of his life to education and sinology research. Extremely knowledgeable in his field, he commanded high respect in the Czechoslovak academic circle. Xu Beihong befriended Průška in March 1949, when the artist travelled to Prague as part of the Chinese delegation to attend the first World Peace Conference where Průška worked as the interpreter. In the following year, Průška visited China as a member of a Czech cultural delegation. As president of the Central Academy of
Fine Arts and chairman of the China Artists Association, Xu was the official host to the delegation and this painting was gifted to his erstwhile friend during the exchange.
Images are available upon request | Press releases and sales information are now available at www.sothebys.com

NOTES TO EDITORS

I) SOTHEBY'S HONG KONG SPRING SALES 2014 CALENDAR (The schedule is subject to change)

Auction

Category

4 Apr

A Magnificent Bordeaux Cellar II

Finest & Rarest Wines Featuring the Collection of Ambassador Ronald Weiser

5 Apr

Finest & Rarest Wines Featuring the Collection of Ambassador Ronald Weiser

Modern and Contemporary Asian Art - Evening Sale

(20th Century Chinese Art, Contemporary Asian Art & Modern and Contemporary Southeast Asian

Paintings)

6 Apr

20th Century Chinese Art Day Sale

Contemporary Asian Art Day Sale

Modern and Contemporary Southeast Asian Paintings Day Sale

7 Apr

Fine Chinese Paintings

Magnificent Jewels and Jadeite

Contemporary Literati - A Gathering

8 Apr

The Meiyintang "Chicken Cup"

Chinese Art Through the Eye of Sakamoto Gorō - The Clark Ding Gods and Beasts - Gilt Bronzes from the Speelman Collection Water, Pine and Stone Retreat Collection: Later Bronzes

The Hung Collection - A Selection of Important Chinese Furniture

The Baoyizhai Collection of Chinese Lacquer, Part 1

Fine Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art

Important Watches

HONG KONG EXHIBITION AND AUCTION VENUE

Hall 5, Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre (New Wing), 1 Expo Drive, Wan Chai, Hong Kong

II) ASIA TRAVELLING EXHIBITIONS CALENDAR

Date

City

Venue

22 - 23 Mar

Taipei

Fubon International Convention Centre

III) UPCOMING SELLING EXHIBITION IN FEBRUARY AND MARCH (The schedule is subject to change)

Date

Event

Venue

28 Feb - 21 Mar

The Odyssey of a Master : Chao Chung-hsiang -

A Selling Exhibition

Sotheby's Hong Kong Gallery

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