New Bronze age
The small Chinese pottery bowl that started with a $3 price tag was eventually sold for $2.23 million during an auction at Sotheby's on March 19,2013,in New York. |
Buoyant interest in Chinese art spreads to lesser-known forms, and auction houses are cashing in, Liu Lian reports in New York.
A very rare Chinesebronze owl-headed ritual wine vesseldating to the Eastern Zhou Dynasty (771-221 BC) will be auctioned atSotheby's on March 18.
The New York auction house acquired the ancient bronze piece one week ago from Sakamoto Goro, a well-known Japanese antiques dealer.
The 46-centimeter-high bronze vessel is pear-shaped and encircled by 30 horizontal grooves. Though tarnished by time, the design is clear and intact. The cover of the vessel was carved in the form of an owl's head with a beak as the spout. Inside the cover there are inscriptions of nine characters. The piece is believed to have been produced and excavated in Shangdong province.
Animal motifs were widely used in early Chinese art, showing significant cultural influence of the Northern Steppes, says Jason Sun, curator of the Asian Art department at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
"The symbol of the owl has its roots in ancient mysteries, but it's also a symbol in reverence to ancestors," says Wang Tao, head of Chinese Works of Art at Sotheby's. "A hu is a vertical container for liquid. The wine vessel is, therefore, not only an achievement in the decorative details, but also functional and practical."
The provenance of the bronze vessel was traced back to the late 19th century, and has been well documented and studied since by Chinese and Western scholars. The first recorded collector was a Chinese scholar named Wu Yun (1811-1883). In a letter, Wu says the vessel was first found in a metal recycling store in Shanghai in 1861 and sold to a friend of his from whom he acquired the piece in an exchange.
Taken to Europe in the 1930s, its first recorded sale in the West took place in 1945 for 1,134 pounds, a formidable amount at the time. Guiseppe Eskenazi, a distinguished London-based dealer, sold it to the British Rail Pension Fund in 1978 for 120,000 pounds. Sotheby's London held the last auction of the bronze piece in 1989, when the current owner Sakamoto Goro bid more than 480,000 pounds ($800,000) - four times its sale estimate.
Chinese bronze pieces have interested Chinese over millenniums because they are regarded as one of the most ancient arts, if not the only art that was created at the time, says Henry Howard-Sneyd, Sotheby's vice-chairman of Asian art.
"Created in a very durable material, they were able to survive to the present day and in many cases in remarkable conditions," he says.
Chinese bronzes of the archaic period (1900-221 BC) were often one-of-a-kind, says Wang. Until the Han dynasty (206 BC-AD 220), they were cast in ceramic piece-molds, rather than wax casting. Despite the complexity of the designs, the casting was done in a single cast, one of the highest craft achievements in Chinese art history.
The bronzes from the Western Zhou Dynasty (c. 11th century-771 BC) onward are worth noting because they have lengthy descriptions applied to the pieces, says Howard-Sneyd.
"The reason that is important is because in many cases, these are the only historical documents, or sometimes the only historical proof of an event happening or a person being at a particular time," he says.
In 2011, China overtook the US as the world's largest art market. Annual sales of auction houses on the Chinese mainland reached about $4.4 billion in 2012, led by Chinese calligraphy and paintings, porcelain and contemporary Chinese art, according to a report released by the China Association of Auctioneers and Artnet.
Until recent years, collectors shied away from archaic Chinese bronzes due to their limited knowledge and the limited market supplies. China's laws and regulations on the protection of cultural relics prohibit transactions of Chinese archaic bronze excavated after 1949 and ones without provenance, which explains the art form's lukewarm appeal in China and why most major sales happen overseas, says Wang.
But the surging prices in the main categories of Chinese art prompted collectors to expand their horizons to water ink paintings and the bronzes.
"This (Chinese bronze) is perhaps a field that has been eclipsed in terms of the strength of Sotheby's other collection fields. With period Chinese porcelain for instance, the price began to move very fast from 2007 onwards. The bronze didn't really move at that time," says Howard-Sneyd. "It feels (as if Chinese bronzes) is a field that has not had its day in the recent surge of prices in Chinese art."
The highest amount paid for an ancient Chinese bronze was $12 million for a 2,500 year-old bronze figure of a tapir in March 2007 at the European Fine Art Fair in the Dutch city of Maastricht on behalf of Littleton & Hennessy, the London- and New York-based specialist dealing in Asian art.
The highest record for a Chinese bronze in the US was set in 2001 by Christies in New York - $9.24 million for a "Vincent dish" party jar from the Shang Dynasty (c. 16th century-11th century BC).
Sotheby's New York held a single-owner sale of ritual bronzes from the collection of Julius Eberhardt last September. Originally valued at between $3.5 and $5.3 million, the 10-piece collection brought in a total of $16.78 million. The buyers of the collection were all international collectors and none of them was from the Chinese mainland, Wang says.
Increasing interest in Chinese bronze has meant that potential buyers ended up pushing up the price based on supply and demand, Jason Sun says.
"Bronze is always historically considered expensive in terms of the market. It's being a market of significant interest and importance, one that was not probably valued for maybe 15, 20 years," Howard-Sneyd says. "I would expect that to continue for another couple of years."
Contact the writer at lianliu@chinadailyusa.com.