Posts Tagged ‘Yan Peiming’
Posted by artradar on December 20, 2008

Cai Guoqiang
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
Helpful sources of objective and rigorous judgement, museums provide an independent voice in an art world populated by more unscrupulous personalities and poor research than is ideal. But how can we find out what the top museums are acquiring and what they are holding in their storage rooms?
Public institutions are often happy to share this information if you give them a call though of course this is not necessarily the case with private museums. Some institutions are now giving the public digital access to their entire collections and the Pompidou Centre is one of these. Its collection comprises over 61,000 works by more than 5,500 artist around the world making it the largest collection in Europe of modern and contemporary art.
The collection is dominated by French works (24,000) and there is a substantial group of US works (9,000) with the bulk of the remainder coming from Europe. It seems that the Pompidou has been active in acquiring Chinese, Indian and Iranian works recently. We have made a list of links to some Asian artists’s works in its holdings:
Chinese modern: Zou Wou-ki, Walasse Ting, Xu Beihong and a number of other 1930s born artists
Chinese contemporary: Cai Guo-qiang, Kai Cui, Georgette Chen, Chen Zhen, Cui Xiuwen, Fang Lijun, Huang Yong Ping, Li Yongbin, Liu Wei, Wang Du, Wang Jian Wei, Wang Jin, Weng Fen, Yan Lei, Yan Peiming, Yang Fudong, Yang Jun, Yang Zhenzhong, Zhang Huan, Zhang Peili, Ming Zhu.
Hong Kong: Man Ip

Yuki Onodera

Shadi Ghadirian
Indian: Subodh Gupta, Ansih Kapoor, Sonia Khurana, Satyendra Pakhale, N Pushpmala, Raghu Rai, Amar Sehgal, Tejal Shah, Bethea Shore, Velu Viswanadhan
Indonesia, Cambodia catogories contain works by Europeans rather than by native artists
Iraq: Jananne Al-Ani, Abraham Habbah, Jamil Hamoudi
Iran: Jalai Abbas, Nasser Assar, Shadi Ghadirian, Ghazel, Abbas Kiarostami, Nathalie Melikian, Shirin Neshat, Serge Rezvani

Shirin Neshat
Israel: Most works Ron Arad furniture design
Japan: 16 pages of works including 1960s photography and architectural works and furniture from 1960s to 1980s, Yayoi Kusama, Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba, Rika Noguchi, Yoko Ono, Yuki Onodero, Hiroshi Sugimoto
Thailand: Apichatpong Weerasethakul
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Posted in Acquisitions, Chinese, Collectors, Hong Kong Artists, Indian, Iranian, Iraqi, Japanese, Museum collectors, Shirin Neshat, Subodh Gupta, Zhang Huan | Tagged: Abbas Kiarostami, Amar Sehgal, Anish Kapoor, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, art collection, Bethea Shore, Cai Guoqiang, Chen Zhen, Cui Xiuwen, Fang Lijun, Georgette Chen, Ghazel, Hiroshi Sugimoto, Huang Yongping, Jananne Ali-Ani, Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba, Kai Cui, Li Yongbin, Liu Wei, Man Ip, Ming Zhu, museum collection, N Pushpamala, Nasser Assar, Nathalie Melikian, Pompidou, Pompidou Centre, Raghu Rai, Rika Noguchi, Satyendra Pakhale, Serge Rezvani, Shadi Ghadirian, Shirin Neshat, Sonia Khurana, Subodh Gupta, Tejal Shah, Velu Viswanadhan, Walasse Ting, Wang Du, Wang Jianwei, Wang Jin, Weng Fen, Xu Beihong, Yan Lei, Yan Peiming, Yang Fudong, Yang Jun, Yang Zhenzhong, Yayoi Kusam, Yoko Ono, Yuki Onodero, Zhang Huan, Zhang Peili, Zou Wouki | Leave a Comment »
Posted by artradar on November 16, 2008

Hino Korehiko My Elegance
AUCTION NEWS HONG KONG
In a move which supports the growing status of Hong Kong as Asia’s art market hub, Taiwanese auction house Ravenel Art announces its first Hong Kong auction of Contemporary and Modern Asian Art on Monday December 1, 2008.
Categories include:
In Modern Chinese Art works by Sanyu, Zao Wou-ki and Chu Teh-chun will be offered. In the Chinese Contemporary section important works by Zhang Xiaogang, Zeng Fanzhi, Wang Guangyi, Yue Minjun and Yan Pei Ming will come under the hammer.
Ravenel Art will also include works by Korean, Japanese, S. E. Asian and Indian artists. Kim Tschang-yeul and Park Seo-Bo, two of the most important Korean artists will be represented. Paintings by Japanese artists Hino Korehiko and Hiroyuki Matsuura are sure to attract much attention. The S. E. Asian section will include works by Agus Suwage and Budi Kustarto, two of the most sought after artists at the moment. A work by Justin Ponmany, one of the leading Indian contemporary artists will also be on offer.

Zhang Xiaotao Picture of Early Spring
The auction will be held in the Four Seasons Hotel Ballroom, 8 Finance Street, Central, Hong Kong on Monday December 1.
Ravenel Art was founded in 1999 and it holds two annual Spring and Autumn auctions in Taipei and will hold Spring and Autumn auctions in Hong Kong. It specializes in Modern and Contemporary Chinese Art, Korean, Japanese, S. E. Asian and Indian Contemporary Art. The company has offices in Taipei, Hong Kong and Beijing.
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Posted in Auctions, China, Chinese, Hong Kong, Indian, Japanese, Korean, Market watch, Southeast Asian | Tagged: Agus Suwage, Chu Teh-chun, contemporary Chinese art, Hino Korehiko, Hiroyuki Matsuura, Indian art, Justin Ponmany, Kim Tschang-yeul, Korean art, Korean contemporary art, modern Chinese art, Park Seo-Bo, Ravebel auction, Ravenel, Ravenel Art, Rudi Kustarto, S E Asian art, Sanyu, Wang Guangyi, Yan Peiming, Yue Minjun, Zao Wouki, Zeng Fanzhi, Zhang Xiaogang | Leave a Comment »
Posted by artradar on October 23, 2008

BOOK OVERVIEW CHINESE CONTEMPORARY ART
Chinese Contemporary Art: 7 Things You Should Know – Melissa Chiu
In China today, contemporary art is readily available in public museums and private galleries in burgeoning gallery districts, and in three new art fairs in Beijing and Shanghai. Abroad, Chinese artists are the subject of museum retrospective exhibitions and grace the covers of international art magazines.
Chinese contemporary art has come of age; yet there are few reference books for the reader who wants a quick but precise history of the field. This book aims to fill that gap. Short and to the point, it is arranged into seven sections outlining the rudiments of Chinese contemporary art: what you need to know about the artists, the art market, and what can legitimately be called a new art movement, perhaps the first great art movement of the 21st century.
Sections:
- Contemporary art in China began decades ago
- Chinese contemporary art is more diverse than you might think
- Museums and galleries have promoted Chinese contemporary art since the 1990s
- Government censorship has been an influence on Chinese artists, and sometimes still is
- The Chinese artists’ diaspora is returning to China
- Contemporary art museums in China are on the rise
- The world is collecting Chinese contemporary art
Artists:
Weiwei AI(艾未未), Guoqiang CAI(蔡國強), Xin CANG(蒼鑫), Fei CAO(曹斐 b.1978), Danqing CHEN(陳丹青 b.1953), Zhen CHEN(陳箴), Xiuwen CUI(崔岫聞 b.1970), Lijun FANG(方力鈞), Mengbo FENG(馮夢波), Jianyi GENG(耿建翌), Dexin GU(顧德新), Wenda GU(谷文達), Bo HAI(海波), Duoling HE(何多苓 b.1948), Hao HONG(洪浩), Lei HONG(洪磊), Rui HUANG(黃銳), Yan HUANG(黃岩 b.1966), Yongping HUANG(黃永砅), Shan LI(李山 b.1942), Shuang LI(李爽), Tianmiao LIN(林天苗), Yilin LIN(林一林 b.1964), Wei LIU(劉煒 b.1965), Xiaodong LIU(劉小東), Desheng MA(馬德升), Liuming MA(馬六明), Zhilong QI(祁志龍 b.1962), Zhijie QIU(邱志傑 b.1969), Rong RONG(榮榮), Dong SONG(宋冬), Jianguo SUI(隨建國), Du WANG(王度), Gongxin WANG(王功新), Guangyi WANG(王廣義), Jianwei WANG(汪建偉), Jin WANG(王晉 b.1962), Jinsong WANG(王勁松), Keping WANG(王克平 b.1949), Qingsong WANG(王慶松), Shanzhuan WU(吳山專), Lu XIAO(肖魯 b.1962), Danwen XING(邢丹文), Bing XU(徐冰), Lei YAN(顏磊), Peiming YAN(嚴培明), Fudong YANG(楊福東 b.1971), Jiechang YANG(楊詰蒼 b.1956), Shaobin YANG(楊少斌), Xiuzhen YIN(尹秀珍 b.1963), Minjun YUE(岳敏君 b.1962), Fanzhi ZENG(曾梵志), Wang ZHAN(展望), Dali ZHANG(張大力), Huan ZHANG(張洹), Peili ZHANG(張培力), Xiaogang ZHANG(張曉剛 b.1958), Chunya ZHOU(周春芽), Ming ZHU(朱冥 b.1972)
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Posted in Chinese, Collectors | Tagged: Ai Wei Wei, Art book, art censorship, Bo Hai, Cai Guoqiang, Cang Xin, Cao Fei, censorship, censorship Chinese art, Chen Danqing, Chen Zhen, Chinese art book, contemporary Chinese art book, Cui Xiuwen, Fang Lijun, Feng Mengbo, Geng Jianyi, government censorship, Gu Dexin, Gu Wenda, Hai Bo, He Duoling, Hong Hao, Hong Lei, Huang Rui, Huang Yan, Huang Yongping, Li Shan, Li Shuang, Lin Tianmiao, Lin Yilin, Liu Wei, Liu Xiaodong, Ma Desheng, Ma Liuming, Melissa Chiu, Qi Zhilong, Qiu Zhijie, Rong Rong, Song Dong, Sui Jianguo, Wang Du, Wang Gongxin, Wang Guanyi, Wang Jianwei, Wang Jinsong, Wang Keping, Wang Qingsong, Wenda Gu, Wu Shanzhuan, Xiao Lu, Xin Cang, Xing Danwen, Xu Bing, Yan Lei, Yan Peiming, Yang Fudong, Yang Jiechang, Yang Shaobing, Yin Xiuzhen, Yue Minjun, Zeng Fanzhi, Zhan Wang, Zhang Dali, Zhang Huan, Zhang Peili, Zhang Xiaogang, Zhou Chunya, Zhu Ming | 1 Comment »
Posted by artradar on October 5, 2008

Kang Hyung-Koo
REPORT FROM THE AUCTION ROOM
Big name Chinese and Indian artists and several premium lot artworks failed to sell at Sotheby’s October 2008 evening sale of contemporary and modern Asian art but the sale pointed to a new trend of enthusiastic collecting interest in South East Asian art.
Sotheby’s presented its first evening sale of Asian art in Hong Kong 4 October 2008 following Christie’s lead in the Spring auctions. Although Sotheby’s was more aggressive in the number of lots offered (Sotheby’s 47, Christie’s 32), Sotheby’s sale was generally a more diverse cautious offering compared with Christie’s. Sotheby’s presented:
- artworks covering more time periods (Sotheby’s contemporary and modern, Christie’s contemporary only)
- artworks from more geographical markets ( Both: Chinese, Indian, Korean, Japanese, Sotheby’s added Filipino and Indonesian)
- a greater price range at Sothebys with given estimates ranging from US$13,000 to more than US$3.85 million (Christie’s lowest given estimate was US$64,100 and ranged up to US$3.2m).
The results however could not have been more different. While Christie’s sale was a resounding success Sotheby’s sold only 28 of the 47 lots on offer.
The auction room was packed with all of the 200 or so seats taken and though more seats were brought in 30-40 people had to remain standing at the back. There were two rows of Sothebys staff (30-40 people) taking telephone bids. The auction room hummed with anticipation and got off to a roaring start with the first two lots. Filipino artist Ronald Ventura’s ‘Pinamumugaran’ attracted furious bidding and achieved a price of US$230,000 ex premium compared with estimates in the range US$13,000 to US$23,000. The next lot Indonesian artist Handiwirman Saputra’s ‘Mental Series No 8’ estimated at US$25,000- US$40,000 was also successful and eventually sold for US$140,000 ex premium.
Enthusiasm quickly waned during the next two lots of Indian art: lot 3 by Thukral and Tagra just exceeded the estimate and lot 4 by Jagannath Panda missed its estimate.
The first big upset was lot 5 Subodh Gupta’s ‘Untitled’ estimated at US$1.5 – 2million. Known as the leading Indian contemporary artist Gupta was the first Indian contemporary artist to be included in international auction sales. Sotheby’s had high hopes for this lot but it failed to meet the reserve and went unsold. This set the tone for the next 7 lots; although the works were by big name Indian and Chinese contemporary artists only 2 (Zhang Xiaogang and Feng Zhengjie) sold just scraping the bottom end of the estimates.

I Nyoman Masriadi
The remainder of the sale was slow and bidding was sticky apart from a couple of bright spots. Indonesian artist I Nyoman Masriadi’s ‘Sorry Hero, Saya Lupa’ estimated at US$48 – 75,000 attracted wide bidding from the room and phones and was finally sold for over US$500,000. Other artists who attracted several bidders and sold above estimates included Korean artists Lee Bul and Kang Hyung-Koo and Indonesian artists Agus Suwage and Affandi.
Contemporary Chinese artists who failed to sell any works in the sale included Liu Wei, Wang Guangyi, Tang Zhigang, Zeng Fanzhi, Yan Pei-ming, Feng Lijun. Chinese Moderns were not spared and lots by Liao Jichun, Chang Yu, Zhu Dequn were not sold. Other Asian artists who were not successful included Indians Subodh Gupta, Justin Ponmany, Japanese artist Takashi Murakami and founder of new media art Nam June Paik.
Some commentators suggest that this sale has been less successful because it coincides with a structural turning point in buyers’ tastes which are speculative and fad-led by nature and that interest in Chinese contemporary art has been replaced with a new enthusiasm for Korean and South East Asian art.
Fads aside, the correlation between prices of works and demand is certainly striking demonstrating a new price sensitivity by buyers of Asian art. September’s financial meltdown is no doubt the leading cause of the many failures in this sale but other factors may also be involved. The number of auctions and fairs has exploded in the last two years providing excess supply of art just when demand is reducing. This Sotheby’s auction competes with the concurrent Hong Kong International Art and Antiques Fair in which art is shown by over 80 galleries in 5000 sq metres of space on the floor above Sotheby’s sale at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre. The Sotheby’s sale also overlaps with Korea’s leading auction house Seoul Auction’s first auction in Hong Kong which is offering high quality Korean Japanese Chinese and Western modern and contemporary works.
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Posted in Auctions, China, Chinese, Filipino, Globalisation, Hong Kong, Indian, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Market watch, Painting, Recession, Southeast Asian | Tagged: Affandi, Agus Suwage, art auction, art downturn, art news, art prices, art recession, art sales, auction news, Chang Yu, Chinese art, Christies, contemporary art, Feng Lijun, Feng Zhengjie, Filipino art, financial crisis art, financial meltdown art, Globalisation, Handiwirman Saputra, I Nyoman Masriadi, Indian art, Indonesian art, Jagannath Panda, Japanese art, Justin Ponmany, Kang Hyung Koo, Korean art, Lee Bul, Liao Jichun, Liu Wei, Nam June Paik, Ronald Ventura, Seoul Auction, Sothebys, Sothebys Hong Kong, Subodh Gupta, superhero art, Takashi Murakami, Tang Zhigang, Thukral and Tagra, Wang Guangyi, Yan Peiming, Zeng Fanzhi, Zhang Xiaogang, Zhu Dequn | 2 Comments »
Posted by artradar on August 27, 2008
SURVEY EXHIBITION CHINESESE CONTEMPORARY ART BEIJING to 12 Oct 2008
This series of exhibitions, site commissions and educational projects entitled “Our Future” aims at opening its door to the future of art in China.
The exhibition will give wide-angle view of the work and artistic practice of several generations of artists. Through special commissions and new acquisitions, work rarely seen before will be viewable to the public.
Featuring around 60 Chinese artists, the exhibition will present no less than 92 works by such prominent names as Chen Zhen, Gu Wenda, Huang Yong Ping, Wang Guangyi, Wang Du, Zhang Xiaogang.
New projects, performances and educational works from Cao Fei, He Yunchang, Qiu Zhijie and Yang Jiechang have been especially created for the Our Future exhibition.
“Our Future: Site Commissions” is a long-term project and has commissioned installations, murals, paintings and sculptures especially designed for the exhibition site by artists such as Ai Wei Wei, Michael Lin, Wang Du, Wang Jianwei, Wen Fang, Yan Lei and Yan Peiming.
Throughout the interior and exterior of the building, the organizer will pay tribute to the work these artists have accomplished over the past two decades in bringing Chinese contemporary art onto the international art scene by devoting its entire 8,000 square meters space to sustain their artistic creations, beyond the exhibition halls.
“Our Future: The Guy & Myriam Ullens Foundation Collection”
Exhibition Date: 19 Jul 2008 – 12 Oct 2008
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If you are interested in this post, you might also be interested to read more about the UBS four decade survey of contemporary art on show in Beijing to November 7 2008.
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Posted in Chinese, Surveys | Tagged: art in Beijing, Cao Fei, Chen Zhen, Chinese art, Gu Wenda, He Yunchang, Huang Yong Ping, Michael Lin, Our Future, Qiu Zhijie, survey, UCCA, Ullens Center, Wang Du, Wang Guangyi, Wang Jianwei, Wen Fang, Yan Lei, Yan Peiming, Yang Jiechang, Zhang Xiaogang | Leave a Comment »