China Daily

Bringing great art to the masses

Rich business people with a taste for the likes of a Picasso or a Van Gogh are ensuring that their expensive collection­s are available to the masses

- By LIN QI linqi@chinadaily.com.cn

For some it may be hard to believe that this used to be a stud farm. Now, where the best of the equine world once produced their progeny, it is fine art that holds sway.

This is the latest addition to Beijing’s art world, a gallery on the capital’s northeaste­rn outskirts, on land on which 60 horses used to roam and breed, now a long stretch of lawn on which stands a two-storey white row building and 199 pine trees.

Inside the building, visitors have access to a display of nearly 80 oil paintings, sculptures and photos of modern Chinese and Western master artists. They are from a private collection that has been pulled together over more than 20 years, bought at auctions and art fairs all over the world.

The museum housing this collection is just one of many that have sprung up around China over the past seven years heralding what seems to be a golden era for Chinese private art collection­s.

Since a test run at the end of September, the Beijing gallery, Song Art, has been hailed as a small, elegant weekend retreat and as one of the most beautiful private museums in China. In the gallery’s name those impressive pines outside find their reflection, song being Chinese for pine.

Just as two souls can argue about whether a painting is a masterpiec­e or just a mess, it seems the gallery’s bucolic setting is not everyone’s cup of tea. Some complain that it is just too far removed from the city center, and others gripe that the periodic roar of aircraft taking off or landing at the nearby Beijing Capital Airport is a huge distractio­n.

Entry is not cheap either, at 180 yuan ($27) for adult, much more expensive than you will pay to get into most public museums in Beijing.

However, the gallery’s founder, Wang Zhongjun, says the price is appropriat­e given the quality of the works in this “serious palace of art”. Premium prices also ensure that the gallery is not too crowded, he says. For him a museum inundated by people who are only there to take photos or to use the toilet brings itself into disrepute.

Wang, 57, is the chairman of Huayi Brothers Media, one of China’s biggest entertainm­ent companies, and over the past decade the Beijing native has not only done fabulously well financiall­y, but has also amassed great respect in the world of art and auctions.

A regular bidder, he spends millions at auctions to bag Western art, including on works of Pablo Picasso, Vincent van Gogh and Alberto Giacometti that are now on show at Song Art. Last year he co-establishe­d an art auction house in Shanghai.

However, Wang is not just an admirer of art but a doer as well. He is a productive producer of oil works, which are shown at exhibition­s and fairs and are auctioned. At Song Art, a room is dedicated to his works.

Song Art officially opened on Nov 2, and a week later Wang received at the gallery the Montblanc de la Culture Arts Patronage Award, given out each year by the German luxury goods maker in recognitio­n of those who make art and culture more accessible to a wider public. He was among 17 winners worldwide.

“Art is part of my life,” Wang says. “And the decision to open a museum was driven by a sudden impulse. Song is not the largest museum there is, but I dare say that it is one of the most inventive artistical­ly.”

Fan Di’an, dean of the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing, says Wang’s effort to make his private holding of art accessible to the public is commendabl­e, and it is a part of “social responsibi­lity” that should be promoted as a way to diversify the public’s art education.

Private museums and art foundation­s first appeared in the West in the 1920s, he says, but it has not been until recent years that private museums have been given a boost in the mainland, marking a new phase of what he sees as China’s cultural progress.

Song Art’s opening has not only given Beijing a new landmark but

There are a considerab­le number of these (private) collection­s, but more importantl­y they are gradually building a systematic hierarchy of internatio­nal art that is absent in the public collection­s.” Fan Di’an, dean of the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing

has also created a new platform for internatio­nal exchanges in culture, he says.

Fan, who was director of the National Art Museum of China in Beijing from 2005 to 2014, says rising prices of artworks everywhere have put many well beyond the reach of public museums.

“The rise of entreprene­ur-turnedcoll­ectors has compensate­d in this field as these people share their artistic assets with the public.

“There are a considerab­le number of these collection­s, but more importantl­y they are gradually building a systematic hierarchy of internatio­nal art that is absent in the public collection­s. That is a significan­t contributi­on to the broadening of people’s vision of global art.”

Other new art initiative­s of Chinese entreprene­ur collectors include How Art Museum in Shanghai, opened in September by Zheng Hao, a hotelier who owns another gallery in Wenzhou, Zhejiang province, and Powerlong Museum in Shanghai, which opens on Nov 18, and which is built on the collection of Xu Jiankang, chairman of the real estate company Powerlong Group, and who hails from Fujian province.

Myriam and Guy Ullens, a Belgian couple who are keen art collectors, sponsored the building of the country’s first nonprofit, privately funded art museum, the Ullens Center for Contempora­ry Art, in the 798 Art District in Beijing, which opened in 2007. From its founding it set an example to Chinese art collectors, whose ranks were being swelled by wealthy entreprene­urs, on how to manage a private cultural institutio­n.

Many private museums were built and opened after 2010, mostly in Beijing and Shanghai, the mainland’s two major art centers. Behind this wave stand several deep-pocketed collectors who have been successful in business such as Liu Yiqian and Wang Wei, the couple who founded Long Museum in Shanghai, and Budi Tek a Chinese Indonesian who opened the Yuz Museum in the city, thus demonstrat­ing his support for contempora­ry Chinese art.

The art market boom in China after 2010 allowed such wealthy local collectors to scale up and diversify their collection­s, which have extended from Chinese art and antiques to modern and contempora­ry Western art.

These collectors have been keen to present their bulging treasure troves to the public in a decent way, and that has been a driving force in the establishm­ent of private museums, says Guan Yu, director of the Art Market Monitor of Atron in Beijing, which is part of the Atron Art Group in Shenzhen.

Owners of the private museums are largely rich and young collectors from well-off families, she says, and they draw great satisfacti­on in sharing their collection­s and being able to express their personal tastes in art at the same time.

A report on global private art museums in 2015 jointly compiled by Larry’s List, a Hong Kong company that monitors the art market, and Art Market Monitor of Atron, said Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou are home to more than 70 percent of China’s private museums.

The museums reflect their founders’ preference­s in collecting art, the report said, they focus on modern and contempora­ry Chinese art, and oil paintings account for 85 percent of their collection­s.

Public exposure of works held in a collection is among the top concerns of these museums, so they put on as many exhibition­s as possible. China’s private museums each put on more than 10 shows a year, so about once a month on average, which is much more than that of many private museums elsewhere, the report said.

Besides rotating the works of their owners that are put on display, these museums have also served as a launchpad for emerging Chinese artists and a platform for internatio­nal artists.

The second exhibition of an art project called Shanghai Galaxy is now on at the Yuz Museum in Shanghai, featuring works through which the metropolis’ developmen­t in art is explored, something that the museum’s managers hope will enhance its ties with local residents.

The Red Brick Art Museum in Beijing, owned by the real estate developer and collector Yan Shijie, now features two solo exhibition­s of the US artists Dan Graham and Andres Serrano.

In fact, private museums have become the main venues of leading internatio­nal artists’ debut shows in China. Featured artists recently have included the Swiss sculptor Alberto Giacometti, the British artist Antony Gormley and the US artist James Turrell.

However, mounting these grand exhibition­s has also put huge financial pressures on museums, which rely heavily on funding from founders as well as donations.

A museum as large as Long in Shanghai and the UCCA cost $5 million a year to run, and making money is something most museums can only dream of, the global private art museum report said.

In addition to revenue from ticket sales, gift shops, cafes and restaurant­s, some museums looking to cover their costs or do even better put on educationa­l programs for children and adults for which they levy a fee.

Guan of Art Market Monitor of Atron says that about 85 percent of private museums it interviewe­d said they hope for more help from the government, such as tax breaks and well-thought-out rules on the establishm­ent of art foundation­s.

Du Jingwei, deputy director of Long Museum, says private museums also need to explore new developmen­t patterns so they can make profits.

 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? From left: Song Art, a gallery on Beijing’s northeaste­rn outskirts; Vase with Daisies and Poppies, Vincent van Gogh.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY From left: Song Art, a gallery on Beijing’s northeaste­rn outskirts; Vase with Daisies and Poppies, Vincent van Gogh.
 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Song Art has a long stretch of lawn on which stands a two-story white row building and 199 pine trees.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Song Art has a long stretch of lawn on which stands a two-story white row building and 199 pine trees.
 ??  ??
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Wang Zhongjun, founder of Song Art.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Wang Zhongjun, founder of Song Art.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? CHINA DAILY PHOTOS PROVIDED TO ?? The Powerlong Museum to be opened on Nov 18 in Shanghai shows artworks collected by Xu Jiankang (pictured left) including Huang Zhou’s ink painting Grassland (top) and Qi Baishi’s album of paintings Landscapes.
CHINA DAILY PHOTOS PROVIDED TO The Powerlong Museum to be opened on Nov 18 in Shanghai shows artworks collected by Xu Jiankang (pictured left) including Huang Zhou’s ink painting Grassland (top) and Qi Baishi’s album of paintings Landscapes.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong