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Carlton Rochell Asian Art Presents Indian and Himalayan Art

Carlton Rochell Vajrapani Mandala

Vajrapani Mandala, Tibet, 14th/15th century, Distemper on cloth, 25 5/8 x 19¾ in. (65 by 50 cm)

March 14 – 22, 2024
Asia Week Hours: Mar 14, 16, 18-22, 10am-6pm; Mar 15, 10am-5pm; Mar 17, 11am-5pm (otherwise by appointment)
Opening Reception: Friday, March 15, 5-9pm

Adam Williams Fine Art 24 East 80th Street

Carlton Rochell Asian Art is pleased to present paintings, sculptures, and ritual objects from Tibet, Nepal, and India for this year’s Asia Week New York. Many of the works are drawn from international private collections and have been exhibited in various museum exhibitions. Highlights include a group of Tibetan Buddhist paintings (thangkas) which are of outstanding quality. They look forward to inviting you to their exhibition at Adam Williams Fine Art at 24 E. 80th Street.

Carlton Rochell Bhaishajyaguru and VairocanaPost
Manuscript Cover with Prajnaparamita, Bhaishajyaguru, and Vairocana, Tibet, 14th century, Polychrome and gilding on wood, 10½ by 27 in. (26.5 by 68.6 cm.)

To learn more click here.

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Onishi Gallery Features Inoue Manji / David Stanley Hewett and KOGEI and Art

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Inoue Manji (b. 1929, Living National Treasure), Hakuji (white porcelain) Spiral Vase, 2023, porcelain; David Stanley Hewett (b.1967), EN 6, 2023, Kanazawa gold leaf on canvas, 25 5/8 x 25 5/8 in. (65 x 65 cm)

Inoue Manji / David Stanley Hewett
KOGEI and Art
March 14 – 22, 2024
Asia Week Hours: Mar 14-16 & 18-22, 10am-5pm (otherwise by appointment)
Opening Receptions: Thursday, March 14, 5-8pm

521 West 26th Street

In celebration of Asia Week New York 2024, we are pleased to be presenting two exhibitions – Inoue Manji / David Stanley Hewett celebrating Living National Treasure Inoue Manji and Japan based artist David Stanley Hewett and KOGEI and Art, marking the inauguration of KOGEI USA, a non-profit dedicated to the revitalization of Japan’s world-famous KOGEI (art crafts).

In Inoue Manji / David Stanley Hewett, the two artists’ practices convey contrasting aspects of Japanese visual expression. Inoue Manji—a “Living National Treasure” and the embodiment of his country’s dedication to traditional philosophies, materials, and techniques—uses the purity of hakuji (white porcelain) to create works that offer a new perspective on Japanese minimalism, while David Stanley Hewett, an American living in Japan, works in the medium of finest Japanese gold leaf applied to canvas or wood, preserving and re-imagining a heritage of gorgeous decoration with its roots in elite samurai culture.

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Nakagawa Mamoru (b. 1947), Living National Treasure, Yubae (Sunset’s Glow), 2013, Vase; cast alloy of copper, silver, and tin with inlays of copper, silver, and gold, H7 1/2 x W12 5/8 x D5 1/2 in. (19 x 32 x 14 cm)

Originally coined to translate the word “craft,” today the term KOGEI has a higher significance, denoting works that, even at their most innovative, use materials and methods that have stood the test of time and reflect an unrivalled dedication to technical perfection and refinement, from generation to generation over many centuries. Works in this exhibition include those in ceramics, metal, and lacquer by both well-established artists and newcomers to the field. Alongside masterpieces by “Living National Treasures” such as Imaizumi Imaemon XIV, Nakagawa Mamoru, Ōsumi Yukie, and Murose Kazumi, the exhibition includes recent work by Rusu Aki and Konno Tomoko, two younger women who are building international reputations with sculptural pieces that combine technical rigor with an inventive approach to materials and processes.

These two exhibitions mark the inauguration of KOGEI USA, a nonprofit dedicated to revitalizing Japan’s world-famous KOGEI (art crafts) under the banner Securing Our Heritage, Nurturing Our Traditions, Building Our Futures. The exhibitions promotes one of KOGEI USA’s key goals: the formation of new creative links between Japanese and non-Japanese masters who share a passion for preserving and handing on the best traditional hand-made arts.

To learn more, click here.

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Thomas Murray’s Collections: Ainu, Boro, Islamic Batiks, Tibetan Rugs, Indonesian Textiles, Indian Trade Cloth, Wrathful Deity Masks

Silk Brocade Medallion Rug

Tibetan Rug with a pattern from a silk brocade, Tibet, Wool foundation, wool pile, Late 19th Century, 32 x 85 in (81 x 215.9 cm)

March 14 – 19, 2024
BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Asia Week Hours: Mar 14 (Evening by Appointment Only)

Mar 15-19 (by Appointment Only from 10am-6pm)
The Mark Hotel 25 East 77th Street
To schedule a time for a private viewing please call (415) 378-0716

Thomas Murray is offering small collections of highly selected works of art reflecting his discriminating taste, as formed over the last 45 years in Asia.

Presented in online digital catalogs, with introductions and captions, Thomas Murray shares his knowledge and vision! They look forward to welcoming you to their exhibition at The Mark Hotel on the Upper East Side of Manhattan.


Kaparamip, ‘thin robe,’ Ainu People, Hokkaido, Japan, Late 19th-early 20th Century, Cotton; appliqué, embroidery, 51 x 46 in (129.5 x 117 cm)

To view the Ainu Collection catalog, click here.

To view the Boro Collection catalog, click here.

To view the Tibetan Rug and Textile Collection catalog, click here.

To view the Islamic Calligraphic Batik Collection catalog, click here.

To learn more, click here.

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Joan B Mirviss LTD Presents Eternal Partnership: Japanese Ceramics in Blue & White

Kondō Takahiro Object

Kondō Takahiro (b. 1958), Object: Standing rectangular blue-and-white marbleized box form on four legs with gintekisai (“silver mist”) beaded glazing with pâte de verre clear cast glass cover, 2023, Marbleized porcelain, “silver mist” glaze, cast glass, 6 3/4 x 6 3/4 x 3 in.

Eternal Partnership: Japanese Ceramics in Blue & White
March 14 – April 19, 2024
Asia Week Hours: Mar 14-15 & 18-22, 11am-6pm; Mar 16, 11am-5pm; Mar 17, 12-5pm
39 East 78th Street, Suite 401

The most visually striking color combination for centuries, blue and white has been paired effectively in all types of Japanese art, but most prominently and successfully in its ceramics. For Asia Week New York 2024, Joan B Mirviss LTD presents the enduring legacy of this timeless aesthetic, and its dynamic expressions in Japanese contemporary clay, through the lens of the esteemed Kyoto-based Kondō family. Across multiple generations, their mastery of sometsuke (cobalt blue-and-white porcelain) culminates in the work of our celebrated gallery artist, Kondō Takahiro, who broke free of his forefathers’ traditions with his patented gintekisai “silver mist” overglaze on dramatic sculptural work.

Eternal Partnership: Japanese Ceramics in Blue & White includes masterful work by twenty additional Japanese ceramic artists applying blue and/or white across a wide range of innovative forms and styles.

This exhibition is presented in conjunction with Porcelains in the Mist: The Kondō Family of Ceramicists at the Brooklyn Museum. Kyoto-based gallery artist Kondo Takhiro will be in New York for Asia Week events. If interested, please contact the gallery for details.

To learn more, click here.

Nakashima Harumi Biomorphic bulbous standing sculpture
Nakashima Harumi (b. 1950), Biomorphic bulbous standing sculpture decorated with varied cobalt-blue polka dots; titled, Absurdity, 2018, Glazed porcelain, 22 1/2 x 17 3/4 x 11 3/4 in.

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Loewentheil Photography of China Collection’s Dragon Women: Early Chinese Photography

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Lai Fong, Women from Amoy, 1870s, albumen silver print

Dragon Women: Early Chinese Photography
March 14 – May 15, 2024
Asia Week Hours: Mar 14-15 & 18-22, 10:30am-5pm; Mar 16-17, 1-5pm (otherwise by appointment)
Opening Reception: Friday, March 15, 6-9pm with Female Lion Dance Performance
10 W. 18th Street, 7th Floor Penthouse

Loewentheil Photography of China Collection is pleased to present Dragon Women: Early Photographs of China during this year’s Asia Week New York, which offers a rare occasion to view some of the earliest photographs of Chinese women, most taken in the 1860s and 1870s. Celebrating the Year of the Dragon, the exhibition explores women’s place in society in the final decades of imperial China, as well as the representation of Chinese women in photography, exposing female attitudes toward the camera in the late Qing dynasty.

Highlights include a rare photographs by the first known Chinese female photographer, Mae Linda Talbot, and works by Hedda Morrison, and Isabella Bird, as well as masterworks by Chinese and international photographers such as Sze Yuan Ming Studio, Pun Lun Studio, A Chan Studio, Lai Fong, and John Thomson, whose Portrait of Three Women in Beijing, circa 1868, is on view.

LoewentheilThreeWomen1200John Thomson, Portrait of Three Women, c. 1868, albumen silver print

To learn more, click here.

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Sotheby’s March 2024 Asia Week New York Auctions

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A monumental gilt-bronze figure of Panjarnata Mahakala, Mark and Period of Xuande, overall Height: 29 1/8 in. (74 cm); Estimate US$4,000,000- US$6,000,000, Wrathful Deities: Masterworks from the Bodhimanda Foundation

During Asia Week New York, Sotheby’s will present extraordinary and diverse collections of Asian art spanning 4,000 years of history. Poised to lead the week-long sale series are two monumental early Ming Imperial bronze masterpieces from the Bodhimanda Foundation. The works will headline Sotheby’s March Asian Art sales on 19 March in a two-lot sale – “Wrathful Deities: Masterworks from the Bodhimanda Foundation” – together expected to achieve more than $7 million.

Additional annual March Asian Art auctions include the storied Virginia & Ravi Akhoury Collection, Chinese Art with works from the Newark Museum, and much more listed below.

Wrathful Deities: Masterworks from the Bodhimanda Foundation
Auction: Tuesday, March 19 at 9:00am EDT
Viewing: March 14-15, 17-18, 10am-5pm; March 16, 10am-6pm

This March, Sotheby’s is privileged to present two monumental early Ming Imperial bronze masterpieces from the Bodhimanda Foundation, being sold to raise funds to secure a permanent museum display for its Buddhist art collection. These spectacularly large gilt-bronze figures are not only of the highest quality but also exemplify the distinct Yuan-inspired style of the Imperial Ming workshop where they were produced. Already singular masterpieces at the time of their creation and the largest examples of their type ever to appear at auction, they embody one of the finest legacies of that golden era of early 15th-century China, their quality, sculptural beauty and spiritual power immediately eclipsing the greatest technological advances of the last six centuries.

The Panjarnata Mahakala is by far the largest early Ming reign-marked bronze in private hands, measuring 74 cm. high, outranked only by two Yongle bodhisattvas, one at Qinghai Provincial Museum, the other at the Cernuschi Museum in Paris. The sheer power and adamantine casting of the protector deity marks it out as one of the greatest Imperial Tibeto-Chinese bronzes of the early Ming dynasty. The Kapaladhara Hevajra is also of exceptional size, measuring 66 cm. high, and coupled with its extraordinary tour-de-force of quality is unparalleled in any museum or private collection.

The Virginia & Ravi Akhoury Collection
Auction: Monday, March 18 at 11:00am EDT
Viewing: March 14, 15 & 17, 10am-5pm; March 16, 10am-6pm

The storied Virginia & Ravi Akhoury Collection is a curated selection of high caliber works from across the region. From a 1958 masterpiece by Francis Newton Souza, to stellar early paintings by Kattingeri Krishna Hebbar and Jehangir Sabavala, to a selection of Indian contemporary artists, the Akhoury Collection tells important stories within the art history of South Asia. A wide range of themes and periods are explored, including colorful, vibrant works by Maqbool Fida Husain, Anjolie Ela Menon and Jagdish Swaminathan.

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Sayed Haider Raza, Tout Houses, Gouache on paper, 19 ⅛ x 21 ⅝ in. (48.8 x 54.9 cm), painted in 1952; Estimate: US$250,000-US$350,000, Modern & Contemporary South Asian Art

Modern & Contemporary South Asian Art
Auction: Monday, March 18 at 11:30am EDT
Viewing: March 14, 15 & 17, 10am-5pm; March 16, 10am-6pm

Sotheby’s Modern and Contemporary South Asian auction comprises exceptional works by the Subcontinent’s most celebrated creators. The auction is led by a monumental 1959 painting by the lauded artist Sayed Haider Raza titled Kallisté, Akbar Padamsee’s 1962 stylized portrait, Head, is the other leading lot in the sale, and from the Estate of Bhupen Khakhar hail two masterpieces by the artist, Hatha Yogi and Savita.

SothebysDragon-Seal-Paste-Box
A rare imperial gilt-decorated iron-red and underglaze-blue ‘dragon’ seal paste box and cover, Seal mark and period of Jiaqing; Estimate: US$200,000-US$300,000, Chinese Art

Chinese Art
Auction: Tuesday, March 19 & Wednesday March 20 at 9:15am EDT
Viewing: March 14-15, 17-18, 10am-5pm; March 16, 10am-6pm

Indian & Himalayan Art
Auction: Thursday, March 21 at 10:00am EDT
Viewing: March 14-15, 17-20, 10am-5pm; March 16, 10am-6pm

SELLING EXHIBITION
Foundations of Abstraction: Paintings From the Estate of C. C. Wang
March 14-20, 2024
Viewing: Mon–Fri & Sun, 10am-5pm; Sat, 10am-6pm

SPECIAL EXHIBITION
Eminent People of the Qing Dynasty: An Exhibition of Imperial Portraits from the Collection of Dora Wong
March 14-20, 2024
Viewing: Mon–Fri & Sun, 10am-5pm; Sat, 10am-6pm

For full details, click here.

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AWNY Preview Part IV: Japanese Objects of Beauty on Display for Asia Week

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Top L-R: Yamada Hikaru 山田光, Juts in a Clay Plane 陶面の中の凸面, 1976, glazed ceramic, 17 1/4 x 13 3/4 x 3 7/8 in., Dai Ichi Arts Ltd.; Kintsugi Teabowl, Karatsu ware, Momoyama period, H: 1 ¾ in., D: 5 ½ in., BachmannEckenstein Japanese Art; Kondō Takahiro, Cobalt and green-glazed large conical bowl with small flat base and “silver mist” overglaze, 2020, glazed porcelain with gintekisai “silver mist” overglaze, 13 x 22 in., Joan B Mirvis LTD; Kajiwara Koho, Peony Basket, Japan, late 20th c., madake bamboo and rattan, TAI Modern. Bottom L-R: Nakagawa Mamoru, Living National Treasure, Yubae (Sunset’s Glow), 2013, cast alloy of copper, silver, and tin with inlays of copper, silver, and gold, H: 7 1/2 x W: 12 5/8 x D: 5 1/2 in., Onishi Gallery; Blue-and-white Ceramic Jar with Dragon Design, Yi Dynasty, 18th c., 30.8 x 36 cm, Hiroshi Yanagi Oriental Art; Tiered Accessory Box with Cormorant and Fish, 1933, Japan, maki-e lacquer on wood with silver rims, 8¾ x 11¼ x 8¾ in., Thomsen Gallery

With Asia Week New York just around the corner, this is the last roundup of exceptional works of art that will be exhibited next week.  From ceramics and lacquered boxes to intricate bamboo baskets, prepare to be dazzled by these Japanese objects from seven of our acclaimed dealers.

BachmannEckenstein Japanese Art
Japanese Art | Pre-modern and beyond
March 15–19, 2024
Leslie Feely 1044 Madison Avenue, Suite #4F

BachmammEckenstein Japanese Art is pleased to present Japanese Art | Pre-modern and beyond featuring outstanding artists’ letters, trending Kintsugi pieces and paintings by Fukuda Kodojin which recently were exhibited in the artist’s monumental retrospective at the Minneapolis Institute of Art.

Dai Ichi Arts, Ltd. 
Ceramic Frontiers: Sodeisha & Shikokai in Post-war Japanese Art
March 12–28, 2024
Opening Reception: Thursday, March 14, 5:30-7:30pm
18 East 64th Street, Suite 1F

In the landscape of mid-20th century Japan, two significant sculptural ceramic movements, Sodeisha and Shikokai, emerged concurrently during the post-war period. Dai Ichi Arts, Ltd. is thrilled to present a landmark exhibition this March that illuminates the richness of these historical movements, offering a distinctive lens through which to explore “Post-war” ceramics from Japan.

Joan B Mirviss LTD
Eternal Partnership: Japanese Ceramics in Blue & White
March 14–April 19, 2024
39 East 78th Street, Suite 401

The most visually striking color combination for centuries, blue and white has been paired effectively in all types of Japanese art, but most prominently and successfully in its ceramics. For Asia Week New York this year, Joan B Mirviss LTD presents the enduring legacy of this timeless aesthetic, and its dynamic expressions in Japanese contemporary clay, through the lens of the esteemed Kyoto-based Kondō family.

Onishi Gallery
KOGEI and Art
Inoue Manji / David Stanley Hewett
March 14–22, 2024
Opening Reception: Thursday, March 14, 5-8pm
521 West 26th Street

Onish Gallery is pleased to be presenting two exhibitions during Asia Week – KOGEI and Art, marking the inauguration of KOGEI USA, a non-profit dedicated to the revitalization of Japan’s world-famous KOGEI (art crafts) and Inoue Manji / David Stanley Hewett celebrating Living National Treasure Inoue Manji and Japan based artist David Stanley Hewett.

TAI Modern
A Pause in Time, An Emptiness in Space: Ma in Japanese Bamboo Art
March 14–22, 2024
Opening Reception: Thursday, March 14, 5-9 pm
Colnaghi 23 East 67th Street, Fourth Floor

TAI Modern returns to Asia Week New York this spring with A Pause in Time, An Emptiness in Space: Ma in Japanese Bamboo Art, a special exhibition of extraordinary works by some of bamboo art’s most esteemed artists, both historic and contemporary.

Thomsen Gallery
Japanese Modern Masterpieces 1910-1950
March 14–22, 2024
9 East 63rd Street

Thomsen Gallery is pleased to present a collection of Japanese modern masterpieces from 1910 to 1950 at their Upper East Side gallery during this 15th year of Asia Week New York.

Hiroshi Yanagi Oriental Art
New Acquisitions: A Selection of Japanese and Korean Art
March 14–19, 2024
Nicholas Hall 17 East 76th Street, 4th Floor

Hiroshi Yanagi Oriental Art is pleased to feature their newest acquisitions this Spring, including a six-panel gold-leaf folding screen depicting a children’s seasonal festival, a 12th century seated Amida Nyoral and a Yi Dynasty blue-and-white ceramic jar.

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iGavel’s March 2024 Asia Week New York Auctions

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Pair of Chinese Zitan, Cloisonné and Gilt Bronze Lantern Stands, Estimate: US$100,000-US$150,000, The Shahmoon Family Collection of Asian, European and Other Works of Art

iGavel Auctions is pleased to present four outstanding online sales during Asia Week New York with select works on view at Lark Mason Associates Gallery.

The Shahmoon Family Collection of Asian, European and Other Works of Art
Presented by: Lark Mason Associates
Online Auction: March 12–April 2, 2024
Viewing in NY: March 14–22 10am–5pm, closed Sunday
Lark Mason Associates Gallery 227 East 120th Street

Solomon Shahmoon and his brother were renowned property developers and financiers in Shanghai during the peak of the early 20th century building boom and Shanghai’s development as the major commercial center in Asia. Arriving in 1907 and establishing Messrs SE Shamoon (alternatively spelled Shahmoon) they soon made their mark on the business community. Their success was capped by the construction in 1927 of the eight story Shahmoon Building dominating the Bund and sited above their Art Deco masterpiece, The Capitol Theater.

The Shahmoon building, designed by Hungarian immigrant C.H. Gonda, rose majestically over the staid, traditional banking and insurance buildings on the Bund. Striking elegant apartments and sleek business offices occupied the upper floors above the Capitol Theater, ushering in Shanghai as an international cosmopolitan center. The building remains in the heart of Shanghai’s vibrant business and nightlife community, at the corner of Huqui (Museum) and Suzhou (Soochow) roads, and is now the main Shanghai post office. Solomon Shahmoon was a pillar of the business community in Shanghai until emigrating to the United States during the 1940s. He and his wife Hannah not only created and financed the architectural treasures of the Bund, they were collectors of Chinese and western works of art and their collection graced their Shanghai home as well as their new home in the United States.

The Shahmoon Collection sale is a mix of Chinese furniture, paintings, ceramics and works of art, and Western furniture, silver, bronzes, paintings and works of art. Highlights include Pair of Chinese Zitan, Cloisonne and Gilt Bronze Lantern Stands and a Chinese Carved Red Lacquer and Stone Inlaid Eight Panel Screen from the Qing Dynasty.


Chinese Huanghuali Cabinet, Qing Dynasty, Estimate: US$70,000-US$100,000, Chinese and Other Works of Art

Chinese and Other Works of Art
Presented by: iGavel Associates
Online Auction: March 19–April 4, 2024
Viewing of Select Lots in NYC: March 14–22 10am–5pm, closed Sunday
Lark Mason Associates Gallery 227 East 120th Street

Highlights of this sale includes a Qing Dynasty Chinese Huanghuali Cabinet, a Tibetan Gilt Bronze Figure of 11 Headed Avalokiteshvara and a Chinese Dehua Blanc de Chine Figure of Guanyin from the 17th Century,

The Collection of Charles A. Coolidge: Commander, American Legation, Peking, Circa 1900
Accompanied by his personal ledger and inventory of the collection acquired during his Beijing Assignment
Presented by: Lark Mason Associates
Online Auction: March 21–April 9, 2024

Charles Austin Coolidge, Jr. was a Brigadier General in the United States Army, serving in the American Civil War and the Spanish-American War, and as the commander of the American Legation in China during the Boxer Uprising. According to Arlington Cemetery records, after being stationed in the Philippine Islands, his regiment was transferred to China in 1900 as part of the China Relief Expedition Campaigns, where he took command of the American Legation quarter in Beijing. The Arlington Cemetery records list Coolidge as the first American to enter Peking during the Boxer Uprising. He kept a personal ledger and inventory of works he collected during this time, and lots are offered with copies of relevant pages. The ledger itself will be featured as an available lot.

Asian Paintings and Works of Art from the Collection of Bruce and Barbara Sullivan, Birmingham, Alabama
Presented by: Lark Mason Associates
Online Auction: April 2–April 18, 2024

Bruce and Barbara Sullivan were patrons of the arts, having established The Sullivan Collection at the Birmingham Museum of Art. Dr. M. Bruce Sullivan served under his father-in-law in the United States Medical Corps, where he met Barbara. Barbara had lived a military life herself. As the daughter of Admiral and Mrs. Clyde Wyndham Brunson, at the age of 14 she witnessed the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. Dr. and Mrs. Sullivan spent their early years of marriage in Japan. Here, Barbara started her interest in and study of Asian Culture that would go on for years, amassing Asian Art across all categories. Highlights include a work by one of the founders of Modern Chinese Paintings, Wu Guanzhong.

To learn more, click here.

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Heritage Auctions March 2024 Asia Week New York Auction

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A Set of Four Chinese Blue and White Porcelain Plaques, 9 x 16-1/4 x 0-1/4 inches (22.9 x 41.3 x 0.6 cm) (each)

Asian Art Signature® Auction 8155
Auction: March 20, 10am CDT/11am EDT
Viewing: March 15-16 & 18-19, 10am-5pm at 445 Park Avenue

This sale offers a wide selection of exceptional works of art from throughout Asia. An exhibition of sale highlights will be presented in New York at Heritage Auctions, 445 Park Avenue. Live Proxy bidding begins on Heritage Live 7 days before the live session begins and continues through the session.

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A Pair of Massive Chinese Embroidered Passion Flower Kang Mats, Qing Dynasty, 87-3/4 x 54-1/4 (222.9 x 137.8 cm) (each), Estimate: US$12,000-US$18,000

To learn more, click here.

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Kapoor Galleries Present Time is a Construct

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A pair of carved, silvered and painted wood figures of Rampant Horses, 19th century, India, wood, silver, paint, H: 33 1/2 in. (85.1 cm)

Time is a Construct
March 14 – 22, 2024
Asia Week Hours: Mar 14-22, 11am-5pm (otherwise by appointment)
Opening Reception: Wednesday, March 13, 6-8 pm
34 East 67th Street, Floor 3

Kapoor Galleries is pleased to present Time is a Construct during this 15th year of Asia Week New York. Art serves as a compass for our conscience, guiding us across the vast dimensions of time and space. More than a visual representation, art embodies the very essence of culture, punctuating the canvas of existence with strokes of meaning.

This exhibition serves as a pivotal moment in contemporary times, prompting a reevaluation of the relationship between art, culture, and their collective influence across time and space. The examination of Indian miniature paintings is a focal point of this introspection; the deliberate repetition of characters and spatial elements over centuries emerge as a nuanced artistic strategy. This repetition is hardly monotonous. Instead, the repetition reveals a profound symbolic depth in the continuity of timeless themes.

Art doesn’t merely depict the passage of time; it assumes the role of a conductor, steering the passage of time itself. Across diverse cultures, every artistic stroke, form, and creation contributes to a narrative that resonates across epochs. In immersive encounters with art the boundaries of time blur, leaving us suspended in the timelessness of artistic expression and human imagination.

Kapoor Monkey Army
An Illustration from the Bharany Ramayana Series: The Monkey Army intruding Upon a Demon’s Cave, First Generation after Nainsukh or Manaku, India, Guler, 1775-1780, opaque Watercolor with gold on paper, Folio: 9 7⁄8 x 14 in. (25.1 x 35.6 cm); Image: 7 5⁄8 x 11 5⁄8 in (19.4 x 29.5 cm)

Highlights of the exhibition include a finely rendered painting from the Bharany Ramayana series, a pair of carved and silvered horses, and a splendid folio from the Gita Govinda. The gallery exhibition will also showcase many fine Indian miniature paintings and arms as well as a carefully curated selection of sculptures from India, Nepal, and Tibet.

To learn more, click here.

 

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