adplus-dvertising
China's Eccentric Art Collector Liu Yiqian Boosts Asia’s Art Market - Artcentron
Thursday 28th March 2024,

    ART COLLECTORS

    Ξ Leave a comment

    China’s Eccentric Art Collector Liu Yiqian Boosts Asia’s Art Market

    posted by ARTCENTRON
    China’s Eccentric Art Collector Liu Yiqian Boosts Asia’s Art Market

    The Chinese billionaire art collector Liu Yiqian drinks tea from his prized Chicken Cup to celebrate its handover by Sotheby’s. Image courtesy of Sotheby’s

    ART COLLECTOR

    BY KAZAD

    Artcentron celebrates Chinese billionaire art collector Liu Yiqian whose growing art collection has put Asia’s booming art market in the spotlight

    Image: A section of the Imperial Embroidered Silk Thangka Yongle bought by  Liu Yiqian shows a hand holding a sword

    A section of the Imperial Embroidered Silk Thangka Yongle Six-Character Presentation Mark and of the period(1402–1424). Image courtesy of Christie’s Images Ltd

    CHINA— When Chinese billionaire Liu Yiqian bought a 600-year-old imperial embroidered Tibetan tapestry at Christie’s auction for $45 million, there was an instant response from across the globe. Although, many people were not surprised about the art buy.  the most pertinent issue for many art journalists was that by buying the piece, the 50-year-old collector had set a record for any Chinese work of art sold by an international auction house. The silk tapestry known as Thangka was created more than five centuries ago during the Ming dynasty on the command of Emperor Yongle.

    An Eccentric Art Collector

    This is not the first time Liu Yiqian, who has been described as an eccentric collector, has broken record auction price. Early this year, he bought the Meiyintang ‘Chicken Cup’, a tiny porcelain cup with a humble chicken painted on its surface for $36.3 million from Sotheby’s.

    Besides the record price paid for the Chenghua-era (ca. 1465-1487) cup, Liu Yiqian, also sparked a major controversy when he took a sip from the almost $4 million cup.  Many Chinese were not amused by his action and disgust. They were enraged by Liu’s maltreatment of a cultural treasure. Many Chinese, especially the young generation, labeled him tasteless. Some even described him as narcissistic, accusing him of showing off his wealth.

    Liu Yiqian was quick to respond to the condemnation and uproar engendered by his drinking from this very expensive cultural treasure. According to him, drinking from the cup was a spontaneous response to events after the auction when a Sotheby’s staffer offered him tea. As a natural response, Liu Yiqian, who could not contain his excitement, poured some tea in the chicken cup and drank from it.

    Images that emerge from the tea-drinking episode showed that Liu Yiqian enjoined drinking from the cup. With a big smile of satisfaction on his face, he raised the cup to his mouth joyfully. For Yiqian, drinking from the cup may have had an even deeper meaning: It creates a bond between Emperor Qianlong, who used the cup in the 14th century, and Liu Yiqian, the present owner.

    ART AUCTION NEWS | READ ALSO: Chicken Cup Sold for $36 Million at Sotheby’s Now With New Owner

    Liu Yiqian is not a stranger to controversy. It is not the first time that he has stirred up an argument with his purchase of major cultural treasures. In 2013, the Chinese businessman generated a stormy art conversation after the calligraphy piece he purchased for $8.2 million at Sotheby’s New York was labeled as fake. The piece was attributed to the Song Dynasty poet Su Shi who lived from 1037 to 1101.

    Soon after the piece was sold, three Chinese specialists came forward, noting that the calligraphy was not an original. Ironically, in the face of all the controversy, Liu Yiqian was exceptionally calm and was only interested in the facts. After many investigations and experiments, the piece was confirmed as the original Song Dynasty poet Su Shi calligraphy by the three Chinese art historians.

    The manner in which Liu Yiqian pays for his art purchases also caused his critics to raise their eyebrows. Liu has been very consistent in how he pays for his art purchases: American Express. When he bought the ‘chicken cup’, he paid using his America Express card, which he swiped 24 times. The payment for the Thangka was also purportedly made using his American Express card. The use of the American Express has helped Liu rake in a lot of points on his card.

    In 2015, the Chinese billionaire art collector paid $170.4 million for Amedeo Modigliani’s Nude “Nu Couché” at Christie’s. It was the second most expensive artwork ever sold at auction. In addition, there were speculations that the billionaire investor also bought Modigliani’s portrait of Paulette Jourdain, who was the artist’s young muse. The painting which was the top lot at Sotheby’s $377 million A. Alfred Taubman sale went for $42.8 million. Liu Yiqian Modigliani will be one of the artworks in his Long Museum.

    About Long Museum

    Many of the works collected by Liu Yiqian are on display at the Long Museum, a museum he set up with his wealthy wife, Wang Wei in 2012. After years of collecting art, Liu and his wife decided to open a private museum that would house their collection. Since it was established, the Long Museum located in Shanghai has been home to many of their collection which includes contemporary art by Chinese artists.

    The Museum contains revolutionary pieces from the Mao period and modern Chinese artworks by celebrated artists such as Chen Yifei and Fang Lijun. A new 30,000-square-foot branch of the museum was recently opened in Shanghai’s West Bund district, creating more space for more collections.

    Liu Yiqian Biography: A Humble Beginning

    Liu Yiqian, who is the chairman of Sunline Group, a Shanghai-based investment company represents a new generation of wealthy Asians who have benefited from China’s booming economy. Born in 1963 to an ordinary working-class family in Shanghai, Liu’s path to the top was filled with patches and potholes.

    After dropping out of school at 14, Liu Yiqian was unsure what to for a living so he became a taxi driver. Soon after, he began helping his mother with her handbag business. A smart businessman, Yiqian outwitted his competitors by finding new ways to produce the bags cheaply and selling them at lower prices. It did not take long before he outsold his competitors.

    From selling the handbags, Liu amassed a small amount of fortune. When he was 27 years old, he learned stock trading as a way of improving himself. He was one of the earliest investors in the Shanghai stock. With his wife, Liu Yiqian has accumulated major art pieces from past and present China. Additionally,  they have put China on the map as the world’s biggest fine art market. Today, the Chinese taxi driver turned billionaire is a force to reckon with in the global art market.

    With all the wealth in China and the new generation of wealthy Asians, it is not surprising that many art auction houses are now setting up in Asia as a way of benefiting from this booming art market. They are tapping into the desire of Chinese art collectors to spend on modern and contemporary art.

    Chinese billionaire art collector Liu Yiqian rose from a humble beginning to become a major player in the global art circuit. What do you think about collection and taste? Share your thoughts and comments.