ASIAN ART Summer Quarter 2021
The newspaper for collectors, dealers, museums and galleries • june 2005 • £5.00/ US$8/ €10
THE NEWSPAPER FOR COLLECTORS, DEALERS, MUSEUMS AND GALLERIES • £5.00/US$10/€10
CHINESE JADES TOP THE LOTS AT HONG KONG SALES
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n April at Sotheby’s Hong Kong, a Qianlong-period imperial inscribed seal made a world auction record for white jade and an imperial seal when it achieved over US$18 million in the Chinese Works of Art spring sale. A second seal, the only surviving Ming-dynasty imperial seal of imperial green jade, and a memorial seal of the Yongle Empress from the Hongxi period, also soared over its estimate of HK$25-35 million, to realise HK$43.43 million (US$5,595,521). The third jade, in the Monochrome III sale, was a zitanmounted imperial inscribed archaic jade bi from the Eastern Han dynasty (the stand dates to the gengyin year of the Qianlong period), which was sold for HK$53,771,000 (US$6,927,856), creating a world auction record for an archaic jade. The white jade Qianlong seal is dated Qianlong bingxu (1766) and was personally used by the Qianlong Emperor. Carved with a dragon knop and incised on the base with the three characters Ji’entang (The Hall of Grace Remembrance) in seal script.
Its four sides are incised with the Qianlong Emperor’s essay Ji’entang ji (Memoirs of the Ji’entang) in its entirety. Importantly, records also show that the seal is mentioned in the Qianlong Baosou (Register of the Qianlong imperial seals) kept in the Beijing Palace Museum collection. This shows that the seal was kept in the Ji’entang of the Louyue Kaiyun (Engraved Moon and Unfolding Clouds), one of the 40 views of the Yuanmingyuan (Summer Palace). Typical of the type of treasures found in the Yuanmingyuan, it seems that it was a very precious and important seal to the Qianlong Emperor himself. Its significance lies in the fact that it reflects the grandfather to grandson relationship that Emperor Qianlong enjoyed with his own grandfather, the Kangxi Emperor. This close relationship, and the consequent affections which developed, stayed with Qianlong throughout his life. There are, in fact, two Ji’entang halls. One is in the Yuanmingyuan, and the other is in the Bishu Shanzhuang (Imperial Summer
An imperial inscribed white jade ‘Ji’entang’ seal, Qing dynasty, Qianlong period, dated to the bingxu year (corresponding to 1766), 10.4 x 10.4 x height 7.8 cm, from a Hong Kong Collection, sold at Sotheby’s for HK$145,691,000 (US$18,770,828), on 22 April, 2021
Palaces in Chengde). These halls are Qianlong’s expression of the affections, attachments, and benevolence his grandfather the Emperor Kangxi had showered on him as a child. The Ji’entang seal sold at Sotheby’s was kept in the Ji’entang hall of the Yuanmingyuan. Its pair, the Ji’entang seal from the Bishu Shanzhuang, is now kept in the collection of the Palace Museum,
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Tuesday 15 June, 1pm
Beijing. By following Qianlong’s imperial poetry and essays, the seal can be dated to the 31st year of Qianlong (1766). According to palace convention relating to various imperial seals, all pieces recorded in the Baosou under the description of ‘white jade’ are made of lustrous, moist, and spotlessly white stone. But one can see that the material of this jade seal
NEWS IN BRIEF INDIAN MUSEUMS UNDER THREAT IN NEW DELHI
The programme called the ‘Central Vista Redevelopment Project,’ is Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s bid to revamp a two-mile stretch of New Delhi’s Rajpath boulevard and erect a series of government structures, including a brand-new Parliament and residences for the prime minister and the vice-president. The plan is billed as a symbolic turning of the page on India’s colonial past – the boulevard, formerly known as Kingsway, was conceived by the British Imperial Government. However, the mammoth architectural undertaking will necessitate the demolition and relocation of iconic Indian institutions: the National Museum of India, the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts (IGNCA), and the National Archives Annexe. Nearly 100 artists, academics, and museum professionals have now signed a statement calling for ‘an immediate halt’ of the Central Vista project, citing concerns ranging from the potential threat to cultural heritage and a lack of transparency around a rushed planning process.
JAMEEL PRIZE, LONDON A Mughal gem-set and enamelled tray, India, 18th century, of canted rectangular form Provenance: Private English Collection the estate of Hugh Meyer Sassoon (1929-2020) £1,000-£1,500*
Scan the QR code to view the auction catalogue www.roseberys.co.uk Email islamic@roseberys.co.uk for more information 70/76 Knights Hill, London SE27 0JD | +44 (0) 20 8761 2522 *Plus Buyer’s Premium +VAT (30% inclusive of VAT)
is not the same. Its colour is slightly green, some areas appear black, and the seal body is scattered with fine crackles. These are all evidence supporting the fact that this seal has experienced a fire, but that the extent of the damage caused by the fire is not too serious. Although the original colour of the jade has changed and minute crackles have appeared, fortunately the seal’s knop, body, and the inscription carved on the face have been preserved intact. It is, in fact, a significant testament to palace history. This seal must have been kept in the Ji’entang of the Yuanmingyuan until the British and French armies sacked the palace in 1860. Unfortunately, not even the Ji’entang was able to escape the ravages and burning committed by the soldiers, and it is most likely that the damage on the seal as we see it today was caused by this event. Representing the special relationship between a grandfather and a grandson and the effects of a turbulent past, the seal is considered of great historical significance.
The Jameel Prize’s theme this year is ‘Poetry to Politics’ and is devoted to contemporary design inspired by Islamic tradition. This is the sixth edition of the Jameel Prize and is the first time it has focussed on design alone. The exhibition presents the work of eight designers from India, Iran, Lebanon, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and the UK.
The finalists’ diverse practices span graphic design and fashion, typography and textiles, installation and activism. Their work addresses the personal and the political, interpreting the past in creative and critical ways. Jameel Prize: Poetry to Politics reflects the ways in which Islamic art and culture remain rich sources of inspiration for contemporary design. Over 400 entries were received from designers all over the world. An international jury selected eight finalists for the exhibition at the V&A, which will be on display from 18 September to 28 November 2021. The finalists are Golnar Adili (b 1976, USA), an artist and designer based in New York. Growing up in Tehran after the 1979 Revolution, Adili’s early life was characterised by separation and uprootedness. Her practice explores aspects of her identity through Persian language and poetry. Hadeyeh Badri (b 1988, UAE), makes textiles with a rich creative language. Her weavings incorporate Arabic writing into the dense and delicate fabric. Kallol Datta (b 1982, India) is a clothing designer from Kolkata. Datta is interested in clothing practices from North Africa, West Asia, the Indian subcontinent and the Korean peninsula. Farah Fayyad (b 1990, Lebanon) is a graphic designer and printmaker. During popular uprisings in Lebanon in 2019, Fayyad and a group of friends installed a manual screen-printing press at the heart of the Beirut protests. They printed artworks and slogans by local designers onto the clothing of protestors, bringing Arabic typography into the public and political sphere. Ajlan Gharem (b 1985, Saudi Arabia) is an artist and mathematics teacher. His work explores the changing continued on page 2
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