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Doyle March 2024 Asia Week New York Auctions

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A Large Chinese Parcel Gilt Lacquered Bronze Figure of Amitabha, Ming Dynasty, Height 20 inches, Lot 71, Estimate: US$6,000-US$8,000, Asian Works of Art

During this month’s Asia Week New York, Doyle presents two highly-anticipated sales of the arts of China, Japan and elsewhere in Asia dating from the Neolithic Period through the 20th century. Showcased will be porcelains, bronzes, jades, snuff bottles, pottery, scholar’s objects, furniture and paintings from prominent collections and estates.

Asian Works of Art
Auction: Tuesday, March 19, 10am EDT
Viewing: March 15-18, 12-5pm

Asian Works of Art: Session II
Auction: Wednesday, March 20, 10am EDT
Viewing: March 15-18, 12-5pm

For full details, click here.

 

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Kaikodo LLC Presents A Discovery of Dragons

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A Chinese Cizhou-ware Ceramic Pillow with Double-phoenix Décor, North Song period, 11th / early 12th century, L: 45 cm x W: 33 cm x H: 28 cm

A Discovery of Dragons
Online Exhibition: March 14 – April 18, 2024

One of the highlights of Kaikodo LLC‘s upcoming Asia Week New York online exhibition, A Discovery of Dragons, is a Chinese Cizhou-ware Ceramic Pillow with Double-phoenix Décor. This stoneware pillow is a breathtaking example of a technique for producing ceramic decoration perfected by Cizhou potters during the 11th century of the Song dynasty in northern China. The remarkable precision apparent in the production of the rare double-phoenix design on the headrest of the pillow and the density and intricate placement of the stamped rings forming the ground are exemplary, producing an effect that is as close to refined metalware decoration as a potter could get.


Dragon Mirror (detail)

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Sebastian Izzard LLC Offers Japanese Paintings, Prints, and Illustrated Books, 1760-1810

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Suzuki Harunobu (1724-1770), The Poem of Minamoto no Shigeyuki, Edo period, ca. 1767-68, woodblock print: ink and color on paper

Japanese Paintings, Prints, and Illustrated Books, 1760-1810
March 15 – 22, 2024
Asia Week Hours: Mar 15-16 & 18-22, 11am-5pm (otherwise by appointment)

17 East 76th Street, 3rd Floor

The Asia Week spring exhibition at Sebastian Izzard Asian Art LLC, Japanese Paintings, Prints, and Illustrated Books, 1760-1810, will explore the graphic culture of Edo in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. The introduction of color printing in the 1760s led to new techniques which were quickly adopted by the skilled craftsmen employed by the publishers of the period. The exhibition also chronicles changes in fashions and political affairs that affected the world of ukiyo-e, both in representations of the licensed entertainment quarter of the Yoshiwara and the city at large. Suzuki Harunobu (1724–1770) and his contemporaries are represented as are his successors in the following decades such as Torii Kiyonaga and Kitagawa Utamaro.

Poetry circles, already a significant source of patronage for artists such as Harunobu, flourished during the 1770s and 1780s. The samurai and wealthy merchants who formed much of their membership enjoyed rowdy, alcohol-fueled parties where they rubbed shoulders with celebrities including leading actors and the highest-ranking courtesans. Poets such as Ōta Nanpō (Shokusanjin, 1749–1823) and Akera Kankō (1740‒1799) worked with the publisher Tsutaya Jūzaburō (1750–1797) to promote the literary efforts of the participants, resulting in numerous kyōka anthologies illustrated by leading artists such as Kitao Masanobu (Santō Kyōden, 1761–1816), and Utamaro. The exhibition features several important examples including a fine copy of Kyōden’s masterwork Yoshiwara Courtesans: A New Mirror Comparing the Calligraphies of Beauties.

Also offered are a representative selection of beauty and actor prints from the 1790s and a group of drawings, prints, and paintings from the turn of the century by Katsushika Hokusai (1760‒1849). Of these, the most important is Telescope, long regarded as a masterpiece by the artist and one of three known specimens. A painting of Kumagai Naozane Riding Backwards on an Ox was last seen in public at an exhibition of Hokusai’s work organized by the Nihon Keizai Shimbun held in Moscow during the 1960s.

Kubo Shunman, a contemporary of Utamaro, was a painter deeply involved with the Edo poetry circles both as an artist and an author. He is represented in the exhibition by a fine painting on silk of a courtesan and her attendant with a cat.

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Kubo (Kubota) Shunman (1757–1820), Courtesan and Her Maid in an Interior, ca. 1795–1800, hanging scroll: ink and colors on silk, 35¾ x 14 in (90.8 x 35.6 cm)

To learn more, click here.

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Ippodo Gallery’s Cosmic Sound: Master Paintings by Ken Matsubara

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Ken Matsubara, Green Dragon 青龍(額・炉縁), 2023, pigment on paper, H6.6 × W42.5 × D42.5 cm

Cosmic Sound: Master Paintings by Ken Matsubara
March 14 – April 4, 2024
Asia Week Hours: Mar 14-23, 11am-6pm (otherwise by appointment)
Opening Reception & Music Performance: Thursday, March 14th, 5-8pm (RSVP required)
32 East 67th Street,  3rd Floor

On the occasion of Asia Week New York, Ippodo Gallery is proud to present Cosmic Sound: Master Paintings by Ken Matsubara, a culmination of the artist’s concepts featuring 20 of the beloved painter’s unique artworks. Matsubara will showcase his series spanning his long and illustrious career, including three works depicting the auspicious and fearsome dragon zodiac, the spectacular 12-panel Kūkai’s View, and versions of Scenery and the Moon Sound.

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Ken Matsubara, Kukai’s View; Sun and Moon, Sun and Venus 旭日昃星, 2017, H71 x W442 in. (H180 x W1125 cm), (Set of 3 panels)

Ken Matsubara (b. 1948) came to the medium of painting as a young man living amongst monks at a Buddhist temple in north-central Japan. Now residing in Nasu, Tochigi Prefecture, a natural landscape of rivers and waterfalls, Matsubara sojourned across the Japanese archipelago, finding inspiration through researching local imaginations of the dragon—sometimes a sky god or spirit of the water. The transcendental themes of his youth continue to permeate his works. One universal symbol is the circle, symbolizing the resonant sound of a ringing prayer bowl. The repetitive shape muddies the separation between sun or moon, sky or sea, or foreground from background: all is one and one is all.

There will also be a special otsuzumi drum performance during the opening reception by Shonosuke Okura. The acclaimed  musician is the 15th generation to receive the otsuzumi tradition.

To learn more and RSVP, click here.

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Christie’s March 2024 Asia Week New York Auctions

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Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849), Fugaku sanjurokkei (Thirty-six views of Mount Fuji), a complete set of forty-six prints, c.1830–32; Estimate: US$3,000,000-US$5,000,000, Japanese and Korean Art

Christie’s New York celebrates Asian Art Week with eight sales, four live and four online, of the rare, the rarely seen and pieces of phenomenal provenance. Live sales begin on March 19th with the Japanese and Korean Art sale featuring the complete Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji series from master of Japanese woodblock printing, Hokusai, while the Important Chinese Art sale boasts a number of rare, highly-sought-after ceramics from imperial era China. Other highlights of the week include massive jade vessels previously exhibited in San Francisco, Tibetan painting and impressive bronze and stone sculptures.

A full list of the auctions is below:

Japanese and Korean Art
Auction: Tuesday, March 19 at 10am EDT
Viewing: March 16–18, 10am-5pm

This season’s Japanese and Korean Art sale is led by a complete set of Fugaku sanjurokkei (Thirty-six views of Mount Fuji) by the master Katsushika Hokusai, followed by a modern and contemporary section. Among their diverse selection, this sale features a fine selection of Korean works of art and paintings, Japanese prints and paintings including rare scrolls by Jakuchu and Kunimasa, lacquer works, sculptures, ceramics and cloisonné.

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A Painting of Ngor Abbots, Eastern Tibet, 18th century; Estimate: US$200,000-US$300,000, Indian, Himalayan and Southeast Asian Works of Art

Indian, Himalayan and Southeast Asian Works of Art
Auction: Wednesday, March 20 at 9am EDT
Viewing: March 16–19, 10am-5pm

This season’s sale features a wide selection of works from across India, the Himalayas, and Southeast Asia. The sale is led by a group fine Himalayan gilt bronzes, foremost among them a rare Zanabazar style gilt-bronze figure of Green Tara from the Nyingjei Lam Collection. Other important Himalayan sculptures include a large and rare Western Tibetan silver-inlaid figure of Vairochana, a large 16th century Tibetan gilt-bronze figure of Amitabha and a 15th century Nepalese gilt-bronze figure of Chakrasamvara. The vast selection of Himalayan paintings highlights an important Eastern Tibetan painting of Ngor Abbots. The sale also includes a group of well-provenanced Gandharan works of art from a New York estate. The sale concludes with an impressive selection of Indian paintings, including a folio from the ‘large’ Guler-Basohli Bhagavata Purana series, several works from the workshop of the Kangra artist Purkhu, a portrait of Kashmir darners attributable to Bishan Singh, and an assortment of Company School and Early Bengal School works.

South Asian Modern + Contemporary Art Including Works from the Collection of Umesh and Sunanda Gaur
Auction: Wednesday, March 20 at 11am EDT
Viewing: March 16–19, 10am-5pm

This group of important modern works comes from the renowned collection of Umesh and Sunanda Gaur, including significant works by Francis Newton Souza, Sudhir Patwardhan and Nalini Malani. The Gaurs have devoted more than three decades to the patronage and promotion of South Asian Art in North America, building one of the finest and deepest collections over this period, and spearheading several museum exhibitions of works from this category across the continent from the early 2000s onward. Complementing these works are significant paintings by Sayed Haider Raza, Jehangir Sabavala, Maqbool Fida Husain, Sadanand Bakre, Ganesh Pyne, Manjit Bawa and Gulammohammed Sheikh. The catalogue also features works by pioneers of South Asian modernism Jamini Roy, Abdur Rahman Chughtai, Allah Bux and George Keyt, accompanied by important contemporary lots by Zarina, Nasreen Mohamedi, Sheila Makhijani and Salman Toor.

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A Superb and Very Rare GE Foliate Dish, Southern Song-Yuan Dynasty (1127-1368), 5 ½ in. (14 cm) diam., fitted cloth box; Lot 912, Estimate: US$1,800,000-US$2,500,000, Important Chinese Art Including the Collection of Dorothy Tapper Goldman

Important Chinese Art Including the Collection of Dorothy Tapper Goldman
Auction: Thursday, March 21 at 9am EDT & Friday, March 22 at 9am EDT
Viewing: March 16–19, 10am-5pm; March 20, 10am-2pm

Important Chinese Art Including the Collection of Dorothy Tapper Goldman features outstanding works from prominent institutional and private collections. The sale encompasses ceramics, cloisonné enamel, lacquer, jade carvings, scholar’s objects, textiles, and classical Chinese furniture. Highlights include a very rare Ge foliate dish from the Linyushanren collection, a Kangxi-period very rare and finely-cast imperial gilt-bronze figure of seated Amitayus, a pair of imperial gilt-bronze ritual bells from the Kangxi period, a carved huanghuali canopy bed, a group of important and massive jade vessels from the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, and more than a hundred works from the renowned Chinese art collector and philanthropist Dorothy Tapper Goldman. The sale also presents curated selections from noted private collections, such as archaic jades and ceramics from the Collection of Dr. Hiroshi Horiuchi, as well as Qing porcelains from the Collection of Professor and Mrs. Yu Chunming.

Landscapes of Japan: Woodblock Prints from Edo to Post-War
Online: March 13–26, 10am EDT

Landscapes of Japan: Woodblock Prints from Edo to Post-War features a fine selection of iconic woodblock prints by master artists from the 18th to 20th century, including Katsushika Hokusai, Utagawa Hiroshige, Kawase Hasui and Yoshida Hiroshi. The selection tells a comprehensive story of the evolving history of landscapes depicted in Japanese woodblock prints.

South Asian Modern + Contemporary Art Online
Online: March 13–27, 10am EDT

This online auction of South Asian Modern + Contemporary Art complements the live auction of works from this category, to be held in New York on March 20th. The catalogue presents a wide variety of works across diverse genres and media by well-known artists from South Asia and its diaspora for new and seasoned collectors alike, including property from the renowned collections of Umesh and Sunanda Gaur and Mahinder and Sharad Tak. Works by modernists Maqbool Fida Husain, Sayed Haider Raza, Francis Newton Souza, Bal Chhabda and Manjit Bawa are offered alongside significant lots by Atul Dodiya, Paresh Maity and Jangarh Singh Shyam, to name only a few artists. Art for Baby, a group of fifteen lots by prominent modern and contemporary Indian artists, will be offered to benefit Outset. For the first three months of their lives, babies only perceive the world around them in black, white and shades of gray. Inspired by Outset’s 2008 international publication Art for Baby, these gray scale works were commissioned by Rudritara Shroff from artists including Jyoti Bhatt, Jogen Chowdhury, Atul Dodiya, Dhruvi Acharya, Anju Dodiya, Shilpa Gupta and Bijoy Jain for a new Indian version of the book, which will serve not only as an early introduction to contemporary Indian art, but also a tool for honing visual skills which are so important in early childhood development. 

Arts of Asia Online
Online: March 13–28, 10am EDT
Viewing: March 16–19, 10am-5pm; March 20, 10am-2pm

This Asian Art Week, Christie’s is pleased to present Arts of Asia Online, a carefully curated selection spanning across India, the Himalayas, China, Korea, and Japan. The sale presents a wide selection of works across various media, including ceramics, jade carvings, lacquerware, metalwork, furniture, textiles, bronze sculpture, stone sculpture, prints, and paintings. Highlights from the sale include a selection of Chinese porcelain from the collection of Dr. Hiroshi Horiuchi, a fine selection of Japanese inro, and curated groupings of Himalayan bronze sculpture and Indian court paintings from prestigious private collections. With a wide range of estimates, Arts of Asia Online presents opportunities for both burgeoning and established collectors of Asian art.

Chinese Works of Art from the Collection of Dorothy Tapper Goldman
Online: March 13–29, 10am EDT
Viewing: March 16–19, 10am-5pm; March 20, 10am-2pm

Christie’s is pleased to present the online sale of Chinese works of art from the beloved collector, professor, connoisseur and philanthropist Dorothy Tapper Goldman. Offered in conjunction with a selection of works in the Important Chinese Art sale, this online auction presents collectors an additional opportunity to acquire objects that are representative of the collector’s refined taste and discerning eye. Mrs. Goldman’s home featured porcelains grouped by color, with those exhibited in the living room ranging from lemon-yellow to emerald-green and lavender-blue, beautifully interspersed with delicate works of art in gilt-bronze and wood. In the dining room, her impressive collection of luminous white Dehua porcelains was featured opposite rich works in tixi lacquer, creating an elegant display to please the eye. The sale comprises 120 lots including contemporary Chinese paintings, Dehua wares and monochrome porcelains, works of art and scholar’s objects.

SPECIAL EXHIBITION

From Protégé to Master: The Chinese Painting Collection of Harold Wong

March 16 – 20, 2024
Viewing: Sat-Tue, 10am-5pm; Wed, 10am-2pm 
Lecture: Sunday, March 17th at 6:30pm (registration required)

Christie’s is honored to present this special highlight exhibition in New York during Asian Art Week. From Protégé to Master: The Chinese Painting Collection of Harold Wong is a non-selling exhibition that will open in Hong Kong this spring to commemorate the legacy of Harold Wong, a celebrated connoisseur, collector, gallerist, artist, and leading figure in the international Chinese art scene. Born in 1943, Harold Wong developed a keen interest in traditional Chinese art, culture, and literature at a young age under the guidance of his father, Wong Pao Hsie. Tutored by the venerable master Madam Koo Tsin-yaw, Wong became an accomplished painter who exhibited his work as early as 1962. His extensive Chinese paintings and calligraphy collection continued his family heritage and forged new paths. It exemplified his passion for classical paintings and calligraphy by Ming and Qing dynasty masters with a focus on calligraphic couplets, late Qing dynasty Shanghai painters, and representative 20th-century artists, many of whom were family friends who enriched his journey as an artist and collector. The upcoming exhibition will showcase Harold Wong’s unwavering pursuit of beauty and knowledge and celebrate his life as a contemporary Chinese scholar-gentleman.

There will also be a short lecture by Catherine Maudsley, art advisor, curator, and art historian, on Sunday, March 17th at 6:30pm during our reception. Please contact Sophia Zhou at (212) 636-2552 or [email protected] for more information.

Guided Tours

Saturday, 16 March at 11am
Monday, 18 March at 11am
Meet at the front reception desk

Also join their guided tours of Asian Art Week galleries with Robert D. Mowry, the senior consultant, who will share his insights on the history and provenance behind this season’s collection of fascinating works.

For full details, click here.

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INKstudio Exhibiting Kelly Wang and Ren Light Pan: New Material Practices in INK Art

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Kelly Wang (b. 1992), Brush Rest, 2023, newspaper and mixed media, 75.5 W x 25 D x 39 H in (191.8 x 63.5 x 99 cm)

Kelly Wang and Ren Light Pan: New Material Practices in INK Art
March 14–22, 2024
Exhibiting by appointment
Contact [email protected]

For this 15th year of Asia Week New York, INKstudio is pleased to present Kelly Wang and Ren Light Pan: New Material Practices in INK Art. Kelly Wang (b. 1992) and Ren Light Pan (b. 1990) are two emerging New York-based women artists who are redefining the material practices of Ink art. In one of her featured paintings, Brush Rest, Wang uses newspaper twisted into strands and sculpted into two-dimensional and three-dimensional landscape forms to transform the normally passive, absorbent ground of ink art—namely, paper—into an active, material inquiry into human society and nature. In contrast, Ren Light Pan, in her Sleep series paintings, uses the heat of her body and the physical, material properties of ink and water—namely, diffusion, absorption and evaporation—to indexically record her physical body in its sleeping state.

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Korean Cultural Center New York Opens John Pai: Eternal Moment

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Photo credit: Geoffrey Quelle

John Pai: Eternal Moment
March 6 – April 18, 2024
Opening Reception: Wednesday, March 6th, 6-8pm (RSVP)

The Korean Cultural Center New York is honored to present John Pai: Eternal Moment, a retrospective exhibition at the gallery of its new building located at 122 East 32nd Street in New York City this Wednesday, March 6th,

The exhibition celebrates John Pai’s legacy as a seminal figure in the tapestry of Korean arts in New York City and the world. His life and works reflect the enduring spirit of innovation, artistry, and the rich narrative of Korean history.

This historical retrospective highlights works from Pai’s oeuvre. From his earliest works as a young graduate student at Pratt Institute in the 1960s with influences from early Constructivism, the show spans over six decades, giving a comprehensive understanding of the vast breadth of Pai’s artistic realm and his unwavering dedication to his craft and vision. Included in this landmark show are excerpts from the artist’s oral history with historian Leyla Vural conducted in the summer of 2021, and the unveiling of an intimate cinematic portrait of the artist, commissioned by the Korean Cultural Center New York (KCCNY).

To learn more and RSVP, click here.

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HK Art & Antiques Shows Korean Artists in Paris

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Chung Sanghwa (b. 1932), Untitled 86-2-6, 1986, acrylic on canvas, 39 1/4 x 25 1/2 in (99.7 x 64.8 cm)

Korean Artists in Paris
March 15–April 5, 2024
Asia Week Hours: Mar 15-22, 11am-6pm (otherwise by appointment)
49 East 78th Street, Suite 4B

HK Art & Antiques is pleased to present Korean Artists in Paris for this 15th season of Asia Week New York. Curated by Heakyum Kim and Pierre Cambon, the former curator at the Musée Guimet, this exhibition showcases the work of Chung Sanghwa, Shin Sung Hy, Nam Kwan and Kim Sang-lan, four Korean artists who have lived and worked in Paris. Known in both Korea and France, their successful careers cover a great span of time, from the 1950s to the present. Each artist demonstrates how the two countries impacted their work.

Based in New York since 2015, HK Art & Antiques, under the direction of Heakyum Kim, is one of the foremost sources for fine Korean art.

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Francesca Galloway’s Indian Painting: Intimacy and Formality

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Attributed to Muhammad Gawhar, Two Princesses Entertained at Night on a Terrace, Mughal, India, c. 1690, opaque pigments with gold on paper, folio 39.8 × 28.1 cm; painting 20 × 12.9 cm

Indian Painting: Intimacy and Formality
March 14–21, 2024
Asia Week Hours: Mar 14-21, 10am-6pm (otherwise by appointment)
Opening Reception: Thursday, March 14 until 8pm
Les Enluminures Gallery 23 East 73rd Street, 7th floor Penthouse

For Asia Week New York, Francesca Galloway is pleased to present a small and exciting group of 17th and 18th century Mughal paintings, works from famous Bundi & Kota Ragamalas, a grand early 19th century Maratha processional scene by a Hyderabad trained artist, drawings for the famous Tehri Garhwal Gita Govinda series and Company School paintings including portraits of Indian children, a Skinner trooper and architectural studies of Mughal monuments and Hindu temples.

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Asavari Ragini, Folio from a Ragamala series, Kota, India, c. 1720, opaque pigments with gold on paper, folio 35.7 × 25.7 cm; painting 20.2 × 11.2 cm

The title of this exhibition, two years in the making, reflects some of the key themes that are expressed in this group of Indian paintings. Our exhibition allows viewers to peer into this world, both intimate and formal. Amongst some of these most intimate scenes is that of a Mughal emperor, not in courtly splendour but tenderly cradling his favorite grandson, a religious gathering of devoted followers and a zenana scene more intimate than formal. By contrast, the formal scenes so often evoked in our imaginings of India can be seen in the grand processions, extraordinary tiger hunts and in formal portraits commissioned by the Emperor Shah Jahan, these paintings show us the courtly world in its stately splendor.

Francesca Galloway’s website contains a wealth of information about this exhibition, including the catalog which can be downloaded here.

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Bonhams March 2024 Asia Week New York Auctions

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A Brilliant Blue and White ‘Lotus’ Mallet Vase, Xuande mark, Kangxi, h: 9 7/8 in (25.1 cm), Lot 71, Estimate: US$15,000-US$20,000, Passion and Philanthropy Chinese Art from The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Bonhams will present ten sales during the annual Asia Week New York this month featuring important collections and works of art that hail from across Asia and which span centuries.

Leading sales include Passion and Philanthropy: Chinese Art from The Metropolitan Museum of Art that celebrates the passion of the those who bequeathed the objects to The Met as well as their great philanthropy and The Richard C. Blum and Senator Dianne Feinstein Collection of Himalayan Art,  42 works from the prominent couple’s collection amassed over a 30-year period that are representative of the breadth and diversity of their taste, spanning 800 years from Tibet, Nepal, and Greater China.

A full list of the auctions is below.

Passion and Philanthropy: Chinese Art from The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Auction: Monday, March 18, 9am EDT
Viewing: March 13-17, 10am-5pm

As a leader in Chinese art, we have been appointed by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, to sell on its behalf an impressive selection of Qing ceramics and archaistic jades. Comprising 174 lots, all of which are offered without a reserve, this sale celebrates the passion of the those who bequeathed the objects to The Met as well as their great philanthropy. The material on offer has exceptional provenance hailing from 24 illustrious figures of the Gilded Age such as John D. Rockefeller Jr. (1874-1960), Samuel Putnam Avery (1822-1904), William Rhinelander Stewart (1852-1929), and Samuel T. Peters (1854-1921). The Met annually deaccessions works of art, following comprehensive review with a focus on similar or duplicate objects. The funds from this sale will enable the Museum to further prioritize acquisitions of outstanding works of art.

Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art Including Chinese Art from the Simone and Alan Hartman Collection Part II
Auction: Monday, March 18, 1pm EDT
Viewing: March 13-17, 10am-5pm

Featuring a wide range of material from the Shang Dynasty to the Qing Dynasty, the sale will offer property from the esteemed collection of Simone and Alan Hartman of which the first part was sold by Bonhams in December achieved US$22 million.

Classical and Modern Chinese Paintings
Auction: Tuesday, March 19, 9am EDT
Viewing: March 13-17, 10am-5pm, March 18 by appointment

This sale will explore the dynamic history of this great tradition with paintings and calligraphy that date from the Ming dynasty (1368-1644) to the 21st century.

Fine Chinese Snuff Bottles from a Private American Collection
Auction: Tuesday, March 19, 12pm EDT
Viewing: March 13-17, 10am-5pm, March 18 by appointment

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A Portrait Thangka of an Early Tibetan Teacher, possibly Chennga Tsultrim Bar, late 12th/early 13th century, distemper and gold on cloth; verso inscribed with abraded consecrations in red Tibetan script; image: 52 x 32 1/4 in. (132 x 82 cm), Lot 773, Estimate: US$400,000-US$600,000, The Richard C. Blum and Senator Dianne Feinstein Collection of Himalayan Art

The Richard C. Blum and Senator Dianne Feinstein Collection of Himalayan Art
Auction: Wednesday, March 20, 11am EDT
Viewing: March 13-19, 10am-5pm

Accumulated over a 30-year period, the 42 works on offer worth more than $3 million from Richard C. Blum and Senator Dianne Feinstein’s collection are representative of the breadth and diversity of their taste, spanning 800 years from Tibet, Nepal, and Greater China.


A Silver Inlaid Copper Alloy Figure of Crowned Buddha, Northeastern India, Kurkihar, Pala Period, 11th century, Himalayan Art Resources item no. 1832, 17 in. (43.2 cm) high, Lot 764, Estimate: US$1,000,000-US$1,500,000, Indian, Himalayan & Southeast Asian Art

Indian, Himalayan & Southeast Asian Art
Auction: Wednesday, March 20, 1pm EDT
Viewing: March 13-19, 10am-5pm

The Joseph and Elena Kurstin Collection of Inro
Auction: Thursday, March 21, 10am EDT
Viewing: March 13-20, 10am-5pm

Fine Japanese and Korean Art including Japanese Screens from the Metropolitan Museum of Art and The Simone and Alan Hartman Collection of Japanese Art Part II
Auction: Thursday, March 21, 12:30pm EDT
Viewing: March 13-20, 10am-5pm

Indian Paintings: Including selections from the Conley Harris Collection
Online: March 15-22

Arts of India, Southeast Asia & The Himalayas Online
Online: March 15 – 22

For full details, click here.

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