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With their thoughtfully researched Chinese contemporary art collection accessible online and promoted on Facebook, Sylvain and Dominique Levy redefine collecting for the digital age BY SONIA KOLESNIKOV-JESSOP PHOTOGRAPHS BY ED ALCOCK
two weeks after art basel in Hong Kong, Sylvain Levy is still visibly excited about what he saw at the debut of the Asian fair. Over lunch on the terrace of his Parisian duplex, a stone’s throw from the Eiffel Tower, he talks animatedly about the artistic differences between Hong Kong artists and those from mainland China. “There is something special happening in Hong Kong,” he says. “Artistically, the differences are very strong. Hong Kong is really a meeting point between the West and the East, and the artists there have a different way of looking at the world than mainland Chinese because they clearly have not been influenced by the same things.” “Interestingly,” he adds, “in Hong Kong there is not the supremacy of an art school like CAFA [the Central Academy of Fine Arts] or Hangzhou [the China Academy of Art] to influence a generation of artists. Many Hong Kong artists have been informed abroad and then came back. They are
very deeply Chinese, but because there is not this school dominance, it has given them a freedom of creation that you may not always find in mainland China.” When it comes to art, Sylvain and his wife of 29 years, Dominique, back their views with their wallet. Their DSL Collection focuses on Chinese contemporary art, and the recent short trip to Hong Kong yielded 10 new artworks, including two pieces by Adrian Wong and one by Lee Kit, who is representing Hong Kong at the Venice Biennale. “We’ve decided to open the collection to Hong Kong artists,” Sylvain explains, adding that the couple has also recently created a new section for Chinese contemporary ink. The medium, traditionally important in Chinese art, is currently enjoying a strong revival and transformation. Sylvain readily admits he can be “a bit of an addict” when it comes to art collecting, but Dominique is quick to point out that “it’s never been about accumulation.”
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The Levys discovered their first Hong Kong artist, Lee Kit, a little over a year and a half ago while visiting the gallery AikeDellarco in Shanghai. They bought one of his photographs, Sunday afternoon: Picnic with friends and hand-painted cloth at Yung Shu O, Sai Kung, HK, and soon after focused on the well-known graffiti artist Tsang Tsou Choi—a.k.a. the King of Kowloon—buying one of his works at Sotheby’s Hong Kong in 2012. But it was only in May that their newfound interest in Hong Kong art gathered momentum. Prior to attending Art Basel Hong Kong, the couple had done their homework, poring over catalogues and researching the galleries representing the artists they liked. “So when we arrived, we knew who to go to,” Sylvain recalls. “They showed us a few works, and we decided to go for it,” he says, adding that the new pieces will be included in the second edition of the book on their collection, due for release this fall. “They decide reasonably fast, but not in an impulsive way,”
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notes Roberto Ceresia, founder of Aike-Dellarco. “Before they collect a piece, they will talk to the gallerist extensively, ask many questions, and then take some time to reason about it. I would say that they give a lot of importance to personal relationships with artists, gallerists, and curators, where mutual trust plays a major role. Sylvain certainly spent a lot of time talking to me, and he is one of the most curious persons I have met, always keen to listen others’ opinions and ideas.” At the time of the interview, the Levys are still waiting for their Lee Kit piece to be delivered to their Parisian home, which elegantly mixes contemporary furniture with paintings by Robert Rauschenberg and Manolo Valdés, a wooden sculpture by Wang Keping, and an oil by Zheng Guogu. “We started as a young couple, going to flea markets and buying works to decorate our house, primarily 1940s furniture,” Dominique says. “Neither of us came from a family of collectors, though we had an eye trained for
Above: Marc Newson’s orange Orgone table, 1990, provides contrast to the deep aqua carpeting. Zheng Guogu’s The Age of Empire, 2006, hangs behind the sofa, to the left of Garouste and Bonetti’s 1990 silver cabinet. Opposite: Sylvain and Dominique Levy.