ASIAN ART
The newspaper for collectors, dealers, museums and galleries
june 2005
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THE LOUVRE’S BIG MOVE The Louvre has got a march on climate change. The museum is located by the Seine, in Paris, in a zone prone to flooding – and, since 2002, the Paris Prefecture, within the framework of the flood risk protection plan (PPRI), has warned the Louvre of the risks centennial flooding could pose to the museum’s collections. Around a quarter of a million works are currently stored in more than 60 different locations, both within the Louvre palace (mainly in flood-risk zones), and elsewhere in temporary storage spaces – all waiting to be moved to the new storage location. In 2016, this risk was emphasised when the Seine flooded its banks, and the rise in water levels was so severe that museum staff had to trigger the emergency plan: a 24hour operation to wrap, pack and take thousands of objects out of the risk areas and up to higher ground away from the potentially damaging flooding. Around 250,000 works were stored in more than 60 different locations, both within the Louvre palace, mainly in flood-risk zones, and elsewhere in temporary storage spaces until a permanent solution was found. So, the most ambitious move in
the history of the museum swung into action. The cost of the project is covered by the Louvre Endowment Fund, with the total price projected to be about Euro 60 million. The answer to the problem was The Louvre Conservation Centre, located in Liévin, near Lens, in northern France. Completed in 2019, the semi-submerged building stands next to the Louvre-Lens Museum, which itself was completed in 2012. The conservation centre makes it possible to store the reserve collections together in a single, functional, space and allows for optimal conservation conditions. It also improves access for the scientific community, researchers, and conservationists. The project gave the museum freedom not only to plan, but also to have the opportunity to modernise the conservation, study, and work conditions, as well as reconsider how the reserve collections are organised. The project runs parallel to the plan to create flood-proof storerooms for each department in the Louvre itself (for works in transit, loan replacement works, etc), as well as study galleries in the permanent collections. Additionally, this will give the public access by offering, via the Louvre-
The Musée du Louvre, in Paris, is in the middle of moving its reserve collections to northern France, away from the flood plain
Lens Museum, a special interpretation programme that allows visitors to visit the storage space and artwork treatment workshops. The new research and study facility, one of the biggest in Europe, will support and help broaden the scientific reach of France, regionally and locally. Currently, The Louvre houses 620,000 works of art, of which 35,000 are on display in the museum
at any one time. There are around 35,000 works housed in other institutions and about 3,000 are on loan for temporary exhibitions. The bulk of the works of art are part of the ongoing project and are currently in the process of being moved to the centre in Liévin. The new conservation building was completed in the summer of 2019 and work began in the second half of
NEWS IN BRIEF
Mallams 1788
Chinese, Japanese & Islamic Art 23rd & 24th June 2021 CHELTENHAM CONSIGNMENTS
A pair of Yongzheng (1723 – 1735) mark and period jardinières. Provenance – Acquired in Peking in the 1930s by the vendor’s grandfather whilst working as a junior diplomat. Estimate £20,000 – 30,000
INVITED
Enquiries – Robin Fisher 01242 235712 robin.fisher@mallams.co.uk www.mallams.co.uk
that year to transport the 250,000 objects in the reserve collections to the new space. Work on the project is still continuing – currently over 100,000 works of art having been moved, including paintings, carpets, tapestries, sculpture, objets d’art, furniture and other decorative objects. The transfer of all the works is hoped to be completed by early 2024.
Inside
WORLD RECORDS FOR INDIAN PAINTINGS AT AUCTION
The online auction on 13 March, at Saffronarts in Mumbai, achieved two world auction records for Indian artists. VS Gaitonde achieved INR 39.98 crore (US$ 5.5 million) for an untitled oil on canvas from 1961. In the early 1960s, Indian modernist V S Gaitonde was working out of a small studio at the Bhulabhai Desai Memorial Institute in then Bombay - a multi-faceted institution that encouraged the interaction of various visual and performing arts, and where the present lot was first acquired from the artist. It was at this time that the reclusive Gaitonde, known for his serene, ‘non-objective’ paintings, began experimenting with the layering of pigment and the manipulation of light and texture. Influenced by Zen philosophy and the principles of minimalism, Gaitonde’s works from this period pulsate with an innate lyricism as well as a sense of mystery. The second artist to achieve a world record was a 1991 work by NS Bendre, Untitled (Krishna on Kaliya) depicting a mythological story about an eponymous deity, which sold for INR 1.98 crore (US$ 175,000). S H Raza’s Jaipur (1976), an acrylic on canvas work, sold for INR 5.62 crores (US$ 780,000), and F N Souza’s Figure on Red and Green Background (1957) sold for INR 2.76 crores (US$ 384,000).
LOS ANGELES COUNTY MUSEUM OF ART REOPENS
The Los Angeles County Museum of Art reopens on 1 April after a year-long closure. The museum is allowed to reopen, as it has moved into the state’s red tier, which means all museums are allowed to reopen indoor spaces at 25% capacity with safety protocols in place. Out of the six new exhibitions on view, one is Asian: a retrospective of the Japanese artist Yoshitomo Nara. Exhibitions that have been
2 Profile: the artist Vivien Zhang 5 Diversity in Edo-period kabuki prints 6 Abstraction and calligraphy, on show in Abu Dhabi 8 Epic Iran is the latest blockbuster exhibition due to open soon in London 10 Chinese Art from the Florence and Herbert Irving Collection, in New York 12 A history of the luxurious Chinese export wallpapers 14 The Way We Eat: looking at how East Asia has engaged with food over the centuries 16 From the Archive: Encompassing the Globe, Portugal and the World in the 16th and 17th Centuries 18 Burmese modern art, Bagyi Aung Soe, in Paris 20 Exhibitions in Japan, France, Monaco and the US 22 Auction previews in London and Hong Kong; gallery show, Hiroshi Sugimoto in Paris 23 Islamic Arts Diary
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