Lot Essay
The tragedies Lin Fengmian suffered in the 1960s did not break him. Instead, he vowed to make up for ‘lost time’, and the thousands of artworks he personally destroyed in torment. After moving to Hong Kong, he continued to explore themes and subject matters he worked on in Shanghai, or even earlier, painting with evermore vigour and vibrancy.
The cockscomb flower has long been one of the artist’s favourites, with his earliest depiction of the flower dating to 1936. Compositionally, Still Life of Red Flowers and Green Mangoes recalls the 1963 work Cockscombs (Fig.) in the collection of the Shanghai Artists Association, except the positioning of the plant and the fruits, and the cockscomb flowers appearing fan-like. Lin Fengmian flattens the perspective, setting the dark table and half of the background against the fiery red flowers and green fruits; to the left, the bright yellow and green spring light streams inside through the curtains. A cascade of colours, rapidly mixed on the palette and applied, layer by layer, materialises Lin Fengmian’s life-long quest to balance the formal elements of line and colour in perfect harmony.
Previously in the collection of Ms. Feng Yeh, Still Life of Red Flowers and Green Mangoes was painted in 1988 when Lin Fengmian purchased a property in Taikoo Shing and settled in Hong Kong. Ms. Feng, who was like a daughter to the artist, took great care of him in his later years. The present lot was among the many masterpieces lent by Ms. Feng and exhibited at the National Dr. Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall in Taipei during the 2000 memorial exhibition, The Centenary of Lin Fengmian: The World of Lin Fengmian.
The cockscomb flower has long been one of the artist’s favourites, with his earliest depiction of the flower dating to 1936. Compositionally, Still Life of Red Flowers and Green Mangoes recalls the 1963 work Cockscombs (Fig.) in the collection of the Shanghai Artists Association, except the positioning of the plant and the fruits, and the cockscomb flowers appearing fan-like. Lin Fengmian flattens the perspective, setting the dark table and half of the background against the fiery red flowers and green fruits; to the left, the bright yellow and green spring light streams inside through the curtains. A cascade of colours, rapidly mixed on the palette and applied, layer by layer, materialises Lin Fengmian’s life-long quest to balance the formal elements of line and colour in perfect harmony.
Previously in the collection of Ms. Feng Yeh, Still Life of Red Flowers and Green Mangoes was painted in 1988 when Lin Fengmian purchased a property in Taikoo Shing and settled in Hong Kong. Ms. Feng, who was like a daughter to the artist, took great care of him in his later years. The present lot was among the many masterpieces lent by Ms. Feng and exhibited at the National Dr. Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall in Taipei during the 2000 memorial exhibition, The Centenary of Lin Fengmian: The World of Lin Fengmian.