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Chinese Sculpture

Disputed Chinese bronzes sell at auction

5 days ago

PARIS (AP) - Two bronze Chinese sculptures have been sold at a Paris auction, despite pressure from China to return them. The sculptures, heads of a rat and a rabbit, sold in telephone bids for a total of euro28 million ($36 million) Wednesday - euro14 million each. This happened on the final day of a three-day auction of the art collection of late French fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent. Dozens of people handed out pamphlets calling for the objects to be removed from the auction. But a French judge on Monday rejected a request by a Chinese-backed group to halt the items' sale. The bronzes disappeared from the summer Imperial Palace on the outskirts of Beijing when French and British forces sacked it at the close of the second Opium War in 1860. Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.



Chinese Man Sabotages Christie's Auction

A Chinese man who claims to have been the anonymous highest bidder on two Qing Dynasty sculptures at a Paris auction now says that he will not pay the money. The Chinese government says that the bronze artifacts were stolen and should be repatriated, and it appears that Cai Mingchao, the supposed buyer, disrupted their sale in a crafty bit of auction sabotage.

Mingchao is affiliated with a government-supported organization that seeks to retrieve stolen Chinese artifacts, and he says that his anonymous and fake phone bid was a patriotic act. "I think any Chinese person would have stood up at that moment," he said. "I was merely fulfilling my responsibilities." The hijinx teaches a lesson that the French should be familiar with: beware of unknown phone callers.

The sculptures, of the heads of a rabbit and a rat, were part of the private collection of the late iconic fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent and his partner Pierre Bergé, and fetched 15.8 million euros ($20.3 million) each at the Christie's auction. The pair were originally part of the Zodiac Fountain of the Emperor Quianlong's Summer Palace outside Beijing. Dating from the 18th century, they disappeared around 1860, when British and French soldiers attacked and looted the palace. The fountain originally included twelve heads, seven of which have been found, and five of which have been returned to China.

The Chinese government tried to shut down the auction entirely, but a French court denied their claim.

Eminent cultural ambassador Jackie Chan rose to China's defense, saying, "This behavior is shameful ... .It was looting yesterday. It is still looting today." In a handy bit of cross-promotion, Chan also happens to be working on a film about the theft of cultural relics. If I were to pick someone to defend my national honor, Chan would be a good candidate.

In response to China's criticism, Bergé retorted, "I'm absolutely ready to give the two heads to China. The only thing I ask is for China to give human rights, liberty to Tibet and to welcome the Dalai Lama." Ouch. Kinda seems like apples and oranges to me, but at this point, who's counting?
Article taken from PBS.org

Chinese sculpture controversy
Tourists visit the water fountain site where sculptures of bronze heads from the Chinese zodiac disappeared in 1860, when French and British forces sacked the former Summer Palace on the outskirts of Beijing at the close of the second Opium War, at the ruins of the former Summer Palace in Beijing, China, Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2009. China said Tuesday that it was "ridiculous" for the longtime partner of French fashion icon Yves Saint Laurent who owns two Chinese imperial bronzes to say he would return the relics to Beijing if the government gave Tibet freedom. The disputed Chinese bronze fountainheads of a rabbit and a rat are due for sale at a three-day Paris auction of art from the collection of the late French fashion designer, while China has opposed the auction, saying the artifacts should be returned. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)