WU GUANZHONG (1919-2010)
PROPERTY OF A DISTINGUISHED NORTH AMERICAN COLLECTION (LOTS 1068-1081)
WU GUANZHONG (1919-2010)

Rice Paddies

Details
WU GUANZHONG (1919-2010)
Rice Paddies

Hanging scroll, ink and colour on paper
59 x 69 cm. (23 1/4 x 27 1/8 in.)
With two seals of the artist
Provenance
Sotheby’s Hong Kong, Fine Chinese Paintings, 1 May 2005, Lot 113.
Literature
Arts of Wu Guanzhong, National Museum of History, Taipei, May 1997, p.200.
The Complete Works of Wu Guanzhong vol. VI, Hunan Fine Art Publishing House, Changsha, 2007, p.72.
Exhibited
Taipei, National Museum of History, Arts of Wu Guanzhong, 10 May - 13 July, 1997.
Further Details
The owners of this collection began acquiring 20th-century Chinese paintings in the late 1980s. Having lived in Japan and Hong Kong, they travelled extensively throughout Asia and to China where they were excited by the intellectual rigour, the experimentation of materials and techniques, and the vitality of the artists who painted in the ink tradition. Acquiring works from galleries and auction houses, the owners assembled a diverse collection of Chinese paintings that witnessed the development of this multifaceted art tradition in the past hundred years.
The owners’ fascination with Chinese paintings is manifested by the wide range of artists and subjects present in the collection. With curiosity and an open mind, they have collected works by Qi Baishi, Li Keran, Chen Shaomei, Zhang Daqian, Shi Lu, Wu Guanzhong and Lui Shou Kwan. Each of the above artists had a strong, unique visual identity and interpreted the Chinese ink tradition differently than the others. Long treasured by the owners, these paintings are coming to the market for the first time since they were acquired over two decades ago.

Brought to you by

Carmen Shek Cerne (石嘉雯)
Carmen Shek Cerne (石嘉雯) Vice President, Head of Department, Chinese Paintings

Lot Essay

Stacks and stacks of straw spread out in formation. Tied together by the necks and with their heads lifted or dropped, they engaged in a dialogue with one another to ward off loneliness. Diverse in form and size and sparsely spaced, they squat in different poses and are guarded on all sides by a dense band of guerillas formed by dark straw stubs. The sparse and the dense, the lines and the dots, the sharp and the blunt... they have given birth to a complex world of painting in an abandoned field without anyone noticing.
– Wu Guanzhong

The collection’s highlight is the five Wu Guanzhong paintings, dating from the 1970s to the 1980s, with brilliant colours and diverse subjects. As society opened up towards the end of the 1970s, Wu Guanzhong dedicated himself entirely to sketching, painting, and organizing exhibitions at last. Travelling across the country and beyond, he documented the different people, cultures and customs he saw, instilling a new life and novel themes into his art. From a sketching trip to Shandong with his students at the Academy of Arts and Design in 1976, Wu painted Longxu Island in gouache. Located in Rongcheng, Weihai in Shandong province, Longxu Island (Lot 1077) is located at the eastern tip of the Jiaodong peninsula. Inspired by the island scenery and the fishing activities, Wu painted many oil and ink paintings and sketches of the lives on the island. Beginning to experiment with ink in the mid-1970s, it was not until the 1980s that Wu focused most of his work on ink. While Wu travelled to Sichuan to sketch, he was captivated by the rice paddies in the area and subsequently painted a body of works on this theme. Although Rice Paddies (Lot 1078) is undated, we can reference a sketch with similar composition dating from 1984. Reminiscences of the Indian Shepherds (Lot 1079) is an extremely rare theme in Wu’s oeuvre. From Wu’s trip to India, he captured the shepherding scene from memory with his superb virtuosity in ink and brush.

For Wu Guanzhong, Hong Kong played a crucial role in shaping his career as an international artist thanks to its connectivity between China and the West. Partnering with commercial galleries and department stores, Wu held several solo shows in Hong Kong and Japan in the 1980s. In 1985, he came to Hong Kong after being away for four decades. In 1989, he held his first show at Plum Blossoms Gallery, a place for many emerging Mainland Chinese artists to have the opportunity to showcase their works to a Hong Kong and also expatriate audience. The exhibition was so successful that visitors queued in front of the gallery in the early hours, eager to see the show and purchase his paintings. Village (Lot 1080) and Ferry Pier (Lot 1081) were works acquired by the owners from this exhibition. Recounting the moment when Wu left China to study Western art in France, his career came full circle as collectors, academics, and art connoisseurs worldwide applauded and appreciated his paintings from the 1980s well into the present day.

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