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Lin Fengmian

(China, 1900-1991)
Estimate
400 000 - 600 000 SEK
35 300 - 53 000 EUR
36 800 - 55 200 USD
Hammer price
400 000 SEK
Purchasing info
Image rights

The artworks in this database are protected by copyright and may not be reproduced without the permission of the rights holders. The artworks are reproduced in this database with a license from Bildupphovsrätt.

Lin Fengmian
(China, 1900-1991)

Owl. Ink and colour on paper, signed and with the seal of the artist.

38,9 x 35,5 cm.

Mounted on paper board.

Provenance

Acquired directly from the artist, in Shanghai 1963, by Dutch Ambassador Roland van den Berg, and later the same year given to his sister Saskia Ramel and her Husband Henrik Ramel, thence by descent.

Literature

Compare with a similar painting sold at Sotheby's, Hong Kong, 27th May, 2013, Lot 1062.

More information

Lin Fengmian was born 1900 in Meixian, Guandong province. In 1919 he moved to Shanghai and joined a work-study program. In 1920 he left for France, to study art at Ecole Supérieure des Beaux Arts in Dijon. Soon his extraordinary talent was recognized, and he moved to the studio of Fernand Cormon at Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris. While in Paris Lin Fengmian spent several hours at museums, studying western art, but also made intense studies of the collection of Chinese art and works of art at the Musée Guimet. 1926 he returned to China, to the newly established art academy in Beijing, where he organized the groundbreaking Beiping Art Convention. In 1927, driven out by warlords, he went to Ministry of Education in Nanjing, at invitation by Cai Yuanpai. Cai appointed him first director of the newly established Hangzhou Acadamy in 1928, where he set out, in his own words "to introduce Western art, reorganize Chinese art, combine Chinese and Western art and create an art for this epoch". After the Second World war, when the academy first had moved to Kunming and later to Chongqing, it returned in 1946 to Hangzhou. in 1952 Lin Fengmian was ousted as director, and his life became thereafter increasingly difficult. His family left for Brazil in 1955, while he stayed in China and later suffered severely in the Cultural revolution, at what time he also destroyed much of his work. in 1977, he went to Hong Kong, where he lived in deep seclusion, only gradually emerging to enjoy his last years of fame and recognition as a key figure in the introduction and adaption of Western modernism into modern Chinese art. Many of his pupils became leading figures in the modern movement, including Zao Wuji (Zao Wou-ki), Wu Guanzhong, Li Keran, and Zhu Dequn. In 2000 Lin Fengmian was the subject of a major exhibition in Beijing.