Asian Art Worth $26 Million Lures Record Chinese Buyers to U.K.
Nov. 5 (Bloomberg) -- London auction houses are selling 16
million pounds ($26 million) of Asian art this week as a record
number of buyers from mainland China flock to Britain.
The collectors have been attracted by gallery shows and
sales, with the star lot an Imperial jade seal that last night
fetched 3.6 million pounds, six times its top estimate.
“We’ve seen a really aggressive push from mainland Chinese
collectors during the last season of sales,” Nicolas Chow,
Sotheby’s international head of Chinese ceramics and works of
art, said in an interview. “What is new is that they’re buying
things at the very highest level,” he said. The seal was “like
holding Imperial power in the palm of your hand.”
Newly wealthy Chinese are keen to acquire high quality
objects from their heritage, particularly when associated with
Emperors from the Qing and Ming dynasties, said dealers.
With mainland collectors and traders needing a formal
invitation to travel to the U.K., dealers said that more than
ever were in town for in the 12th annual Asian Art in London
event, running through Nov. 7. Christie’s International sent
invites to 210 mainland Chinese, with Sotheby’s writing to a
similar number as demand and prices rise for Asian antiques.
The five-inch-by-five-inch seal, carved with a pair of
dragons, was included in Sotheby’s 261-lot auction. The piece
was made for the 55th year of the reign of Emperor Qianlong, who
ruled China from 1736 to 1795. The seal, from a European private
collection, was fought for by eight bidders and was sold to an
anonymous dealer in the room, said Sotheby’s.
Record Price
A soapstone seal used by the 17th-century Emperor Kangxi
was bought by a Chinese bidder for a record 5.6 million euros
($8.3 million) at an auction in Toulouse, France, in June 2008.
Last month, Sotheby’s Hong Kong art auction raised HK$1.3
billion ($170 million), helped by mainland Chinese buyers.
Apart from auctions, also taking place at Bonhams (which
has invited 30 new mainland Chinese buyers), 40 of London’s
commercial galleries are offering antiques and artworks ranging
from the Middle East to Japan. Many of the week’s most
expensively valued pieces are Chinese in origin.
Christie’s Nov. 3 sale of Chinese ceramics and works of art
totaled 5.7 million pounds with fees, against a high estimate of
5.2 million pounds, based on hammer prices.
A third of the 319 lots were rejected. Among these was an
18th-century Imperial jade brushpot, estimated at 300,000 pounds
to 400,000 pounds, which failed because of criticism of the
stone’s color, said dealers.
The top lot was an 18th-century enamel model of a Buddhist
stupa, or shrine, which sold for 229,250 pounds against an
estimate of 60,000 pounds to 80,000 pounds.
Asian Buyers
Nine out of the 10 most expensive items in the sale fell to
Asian buyers, said Christie’s.
“Now English isn’t much heard at the views of these London
auctions,” said Marco Almeida, Christie’s London-based
specialist in Chinese ceramics and works of art. “It’s just
Mandarin and Cantonese.”
Sotheby’s raised 8.3 million pounds in its sale, exceeding
its estimate of between 3.4 million pounds and 5 million pounds;
41 percent of the lots failed to sell.
Bonhams will today be offering a white jade seal used by
the Emperor Guangxu, who reigned from 1874 to 1908, with an
estimate of 100,000 pounds to 150,000 pounds. The seal has been
in the same private European collection since the 1960s, said
Bonhams, which said its auction of more than 300 lots of Chinese
art is estimated to fetch 2 million pounds.
Imperial Love
Littleton & Hennessy is one of Asian Art in London’s
participating dealers aiming to capitalize on Chinese
collectors’ love of all things Imperial. Three brush pots of
varying dates and materials, each priced at about 400,000
pounds, have already attracted interest from collectors, said
Ruben Lien, a partner at the gallery.
By Nov. 3, west London dealer Marchant had sold 21 of the
54 pieces of Ming-dynasty porcelain it was showing in an
exhibition to celebrate the opening of its refurbished
Kensington gallery, said chairman Richard Marchant.
“That’s already a ‘wow’ result,” said Marchant. “We
normally aim to sell a third of the pieces by the end of an
exhibition. Chinese buyers are now the major players in the
market: They want to repatriate their art. It’s made a huge
difference to demand.”
(Scott Reyburn writes about the art market for Bloomberg
News. Opinions expressed are his own.)
To contact the writer on the story:
Scott Reyburn in London at sreyburn@hotmail.com.
Last Updated: November 4, 2009 16:00 EST