Apollo Magazine (UK)

Eve M. Kahn selects her highlights of the event

Eve M. Kahn selects her highlights of the event

- Eve M. Kahn’s biography of the painter Mary Rogers Williams is published by Wesleyan University Press.

Asia Week New York, from – March, coincides with the first anniversar­y of the pandemic’s descent on the city. Unsurprisi­ngly, with travel and other restrictio­ns in flux, the event’s organisers have opted for a hybrid model, combining gallery visits by appointmen­t with online viewing rooms. The good news is that, with the virus gradually being beaten back and as our sensory deprivatio­n starts to lift, about galleries and auction houses will be presenting wares whose patterns, pigments, textures and provenance trails promise to enthral visitors.

Two Chinese bronze sculptures from the early Ming dynasty ( – ), offered at Zetterquis­t Galleries, were likely made at the same workshop or by close competitor­s. Flecked with old gilding, they depict, respective­ly, a mortal and Sakyamuni Buddha seated on lotuses. The gallerist Eric Zetterquis­t found one of the statues in Japan more than a decade ago – part of its petalled base is a woodcarvin­g dating to the Edo period ( – ) – and the other recently surfaced in the United States. He is offering them as a pair, he explains, ‘in the hope that they stay together from now on’.

London-based dealers Oliver Forge and Brendan Lynch present an illuminate­d manuscript page that was commission­ed around

for a patron in the southern Indian Sultanate of Bijapur (Fig. ). In its scene from the great epic poem the Shahnama, an enthroned shah watches a bearded warrior in gilded armour preparing to slaughter an enemy. The artist demonstrat­ed ‘freshness and originalit­y’, Lynch notes, in observing the details of a palace – with its carved fretwork, finialled throne on paw feet, tawny flowered carpet and gold ewers set in green niches along mauve walls. The shimmering page’s presence at Asia Week New York will bring it tantalisin­gly close to a number of its kin from the same manuscript, which are owned by the Metropolit­an Museum of Art.

The California­n dealer Thomas Murray unfurls a Sumatran batik ritual cloth, formerly part of the vast collection of the Wyomingbas­ed collector and philanthro­pist Roger Hollander ( – ). In golden bands, invocation­s in Islamic calligraph­y and Ottoman imperial insignia play across its purple background, which was first dyed red with fruit-tree roots and then overdyed with indigo. Textile enthusiast­s will also want to set eyes on a

th-century crimson textile for sale through Francesca Galloway, in which Christ is depicted enthroned, swathed in gold, and surrounded by symbols of the evangelist­s (Fig. ). Danielle Beilby, Galloway’s gallery manager, reports that the ecclesiast­ical piece was likely made for Orthodox patriarchs in Istanbul or Moscow and ranks among ‘the only known figurative works in all Ottoman silk production’.

Images of intoxicant­s – and their parapherna­lia – are in strong supply, which feels appropriat­e after a year that many people want to forget. London-based Sue Ollemans offers an Indian huqqa mouthpiece in white jade, studded with ruby petals trimmed in gold (Fig. ). Sebastian Izzard brings out

ATipsy Courtesan from Fukagawa, Utagawa Kunisada’s woodblock portrait of a formidable geisha printed around (Fig. ). The sitter, Izzard explains, was said to ‘indulge in alcohol for seven days and nights without ill effect’. The printer highlighte­d the bonne vivante’s crystal goblet with mica and inked the mountainou­s scenery ‘in the newly fashionabl­e Prussian blue’, Izzard adds.

At the California-based Egenolf Gallery, teals, aquas and purples streak the skies in prints and paintings by the Japanese-American artist Chiura Obata ( – ) – a palette that he meant to evoke ‘the last glow of the dying day’. (Obata’s work narrowly survived while he was imprisoned during the Second World War at an internment camp in Utah.) At Joan B. Mirviss’s gallery, which specialise­s in Japanese artworks, a pearly stoneware vessel from by Kitaoji Rosanjin ( – ) has irregular gouges along its thick walls. The clay surface is tinted with what Mirviss calls ‘flung splashes of mottled glaze’, in charcoal and turquoise – befitting these times of raging and scratching, before we emerge burnished and a little singed into the light.

Asia Week New York takes place at various venues (by appointmen­t) and online from – March. To find out more, go to www.asiaweekny.com.

 ??  ?? 1. Huqqa mouthpiece, 19th century, India, white jade with Burmese cabochon rubies, ht 10cm. Sue Ollemans (£3,500)
1. Huqqa mouthpiece, 19th century, India, white jade with Burmese cabochon rubies, ht 10cm. Sue Ollemans (£3,500)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom