China Daily (Hong Kong)

POWERFUL IMPRESSION­S

A rare collection of calligraph­y rubbings will be auctioned in China in November, reports.

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The Palace Museum in Beijing held an eyecatchin­g show in 1996 on rubbings of rare Chinese calligraph­y works, titled Chunhuage Tie.

It was based on a collection of US connoisseu­r Robert H. Ellsworth, a legendary collector of Asian and Chinese art. The four volumes on show were among Ellsworth’s 15 rare rubbing collection­s.

The four volumes were bought in 2003 by the Shanghai Museum at a price of $4.5 million, a worthy treasure, as experts called it, that fills in “some blanks in Chinese calligraph­y history”.

But no one knew where the rest of Ellsworth’s collection was until China Guardian Auctions announced in Beijing earlier this month that it will go under the hammer at its autumn sale from Nov 20 to 24.

“I’ve heard of them for years. It’s the first time I will see them. This is very exciting,” says Zhao Liguang, a former director of Beilin Museum in Xi’an, Shaanxi province.

The museum focuses on steles.

Rubbings were very important for the preservati­on of calligraph­y works before printing was invented during the Tang Dynasty (618-907). Works of many master calligraph­ers, such as Wang Xizhi and Wang Xianzhi, were appreciate­d by their followers

I’ve heard of them for years. It’s the first time I will see them. This is very exciting.”

Zhao Liguang,

only through rubbings left behind.

Zhao says rubbings are very valuable because many stones with inscriptio­ns have already been destroyed or are hard to read today.

The 11 collection­s of rubbings from Ellsworth’s trove comprise different types of calligraph­y works, including two on works of Jin Dynasty (265-420) calligraph­er Wang Xizhi, who is considered the greatest Chinese calligraph­er in history.

According to Song Hao, general manger of the department for rare books, rubbings and manuscript­s at China Guardian Auctions, all volumes were bought by the US collector between 1989 and 1995 from Christie’s and Sotheby’s in New York, and cost him more than $1.2 million.

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