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    Chinese art works to be auctioned during Asian Art Week

    2013-05-14 09:52 Xinhua     Web Editor: Mo Hong'e comment

    Art dealer Christie's is going to sell 300 lots of Chinese ceramics and works of art on Tuesday, the beginning of its Asian Art Week in London this season.

    Leading the auction is a rare pair of massive famille rose models of pagodas, which were believed to be made at the late Qianlong period about 1750 to 1800, said Marco Almeida, director of the Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art section with Christie's.

    Standing at 263 centimetres tall, the pair was the first to be sold at an open market, according to Almeida, who noted that the price could be between 250,000 to 300,000 pounds (383,671 to 460,405 U.S. dollars).

    These pagodas were likely to be made based on the Bao'en Temple (Temple of Gratitude) in east China's Nanjing city. They were constructed with nine upper storeys, each with the upward-curving tiled eaves typical of roofs in southern China. They were exquisite with green tiles, underglaze blue walls and iron red enamel and gilt in imari style.

    Almeida told Xinhua that the pair, kept in an Italian castle since the 1950s, were exported to the West during the Qing dynasty.

    "The British Prince of Wales, later George IV, bought a similar pair in 1804 for his exotic Royal Pavilion in Brighton, when oriental art was considered fashionable," he said. These pagodas remained in the Royal Collection and sent to the Buckingham Palace.

    Porcelain pagodas of such a size are extremely rare. In 2008, a fraction of such a pagoda fetched as much as 108,000 pounds.

    A pair of large cloisonne enamel elephants dated back to the Qianlong period were estimated to get 200,000 to 300,000 pounds.

    Elephants, quiet and powerful, were always associated with Buddhism in China. "They were always used to flank a throne, or seat of an official," Almeida said. Today in the Forbidden City a similarly large pair can still be seen in the Hall of Supreme Harmony.

    A rare surviving pair of Buddhist sculptures were made during the Yuan or early Ming dynasty in the 14th century. These bodhisattvas, made with stucco technique.

    "They have a wooden sculpture inside, and earthenware outside, and were thus very fragile," Almeida said. They were hard to preserve too. "They will crack if it is too dry, and melt if too humid."

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