Bangkok Post

WARHOL’S MAO PORTRAIT FETCHES $12.7M AT HONG KONG AUCTION

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A classic Andy Warhol portrait of former Chinese leader Mao Zedong fetched US$12.7 million (435.590 million baht) at an auction in Hong Kong on Sunday, Sotheby’s said — well short of the top estimate of more than $15 million.

The sale of the 1973 screen print by the legendary US pop artist attracted plenty of attention before going under the hammer in the semi-autonomous city owing to sensitivit­y about any use of Mao’s image in China.

The top sale price estimate of more than $15 million was the highest the auction house had ever seen for a painting in Asia.

The i dentity of the buyer was not released.

Sotheby’s had describe the event as the first “significan­t” sale of Western contempora­ry art in Hong Kong, which was handed back to China by Britain in 1997.

But while buyers from mainland China have developed massive market clout, Warhol’s images of Mao have drawn controvers­y there. A major touring retrospect­ive of his works removed pictures of the former leader when it visited Shanghai and Beijing in 2013.

Mao’s legacy as Communist China’s founding father makes him inseparabl­e from official propaganda extolling the party’s ruling legitimacy, and his huge portrait still overlooks vast Tiananmen Square and appears on Chinese banknotes.

Yet his mistakes, such as disastrous economic policies blamed for mass starvation and the political witch hunts of the 1966-76 “Cultural Revolution”, left a bitter aftertaste and depictions of him otherwise remain strictly controlled.

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