The Daily Telegraph

Best of the West goes East

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en years ago there was very little Asian interest in buying Western art,” says Patti Wong, chairman of Sotheby’s Asia. “Asian collectors were much more focused on the art of their own cultures.”

Since then, though, following the swift increase in wealth in the region (China now has more dollar billionair­es than America), and the ambitious pursuit of cultural status, whether through their own country’s relics or the fashionabl­e brands of Western culture, Asian buyers have become a key target for competing Western auctioneer­s.

Indeed, last year Asian buyers accounted for 35per cent ($1.6billion/£1.1billion) of the value of Sotheby’s global auction sales. The main area of growth was in Western art, which was up 10per cent on 2016 and at $608million (£430million) accounted for 38per cent of total Asian spending. There was a parallel shift at Christie’s.

“The turning point came during the global financial crisis of 2007-08, when the Chinese were less affected,” says Wong. At the time, observers at auctions in London and New York noticed that Asians were beginning to buy, especially Impression­ist, modern and contempora­ry works.

Then, in December 2012, Sotheby’s launched its innovative Boundless sale in Hong Kong, mixing Western with Asian art and selling works by Botero and Matisse to Asian buyers. The following year, Christie’s followed suit in Shanghai, trying out other establishe­d Western artists, such as Picasso, Warhol and Calder.

Asian buyers are spearheade­d by wealthy individual­s who are building private museums, such as the Japanese entreprene­ur Yusaku Maezawa, who spent £125million in New York last year on two paintings by Jean-michel Basquiat and Christophe­r Wool.

In China, museums have sprung up like mushrooms over the last decade. Former taxi driver Liu Yiqian and his wife, Wang Wei, who founded the Long Museum, in Shanghai, paid a recordbrea­king $170million (£120million) for Amedeo Modigliani’s Reclining Nude at Christie’s New York in 2015 and, last year, $9.1million (£6.4million) – another record – for a painting by British artist Jenny Saville.

This week the art world turns its attention eastwards again, for both Art Basel Hong Kong (ABHK), the Asian edition of the world’s largest modern and contempora­ry art fair, and for Sotheby’s Hong Kong spring sales of art, antiques, wine and jewellery, which are estimated to bring in some $360 million (£253 million).

Interestin­gly, more than half of the 248 participat­ing galleries participat­ing in ABHK are from the West, presumably hoping to cash in on the booming market in Asia.

At Sotheby’s, meanwhile, no fewer than 27 works in its main auctions this week are by Western artists – auctions that four years ago were devoted exclusivel­y to Asian artists. These include paintings by Jean Dubuffet and Robert Rauschenbe­rg, the first time either has been offered in a Hong Kong sale, while the catalogue’s cover sports a slashed red canvas by the Italian post-war master Lucio Fontana – hardly ever seen at auction in China.

Among the more contempora­ry artists is the former Spanish opera singer José Maria Cano, who cracked the Asian market for the first time last year with a portrait of one of China’s richest men, Jack Ma. The painting quadrupled his existing record at $414,000 (£291,000), and Sotheby’s is betting he can do the same this week, this time with a portrait of Steve Jobs.

The icing on the cake, though, is Sotheby’s Hong Kong exhibition programme for private as opposed to auction sales, which opens on Thursday. The $200million exhibition (£140million) includes 40 artists ranging from Bonnard to Damien Hirst, and a number of Picassos from the artist’s granddaugh­ter’s collection. This is in addition to a $150million (£105million) exhibition devoted to Picasso and American artist George Condo, whose work can echo Picasso’s.

Wong says that the selection of artists Sotheby’s chooses to show and sell in Asia is not random. “We have extensive data on client interest and auction participat­ion globally,” she explains.

“We know, for instance, that two of the top three de Koonings from 1977, of which we have an example here, were bought or underbid by Asian buyers; that an Asian bidder on the £50million Picasso in London this month was very disappoint­ed not to get it; and that, after Picasso, the most popular western artist amongst Asian buyers is Gerhard Richter, particular­ly his abstracts.”

Last year Asian buyers accounted for 35pc of Sotheby’s global auction sales

 ??  ?? In their sights: potential buyers look at Buster Keaton by Jeff Koons on the ABHK preview day
In their sights: potential buyers look at Buster Keaton by Jeff Koons on the ABHK preview day

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