A Market
Transcendent: Demand for Himalayan Bronze Is on the
Rise
LUCIAN
HARRIS | SEPTEMBER 20,
2015 blouinartinfo
The devastating April earthquake that shook the mountainous
Himalayan country of Nepal, killing many thousands and reducing
ancient temples and shrines to rubble, brought an unwanted reminder
of the profound historical, religious, and artistic importance of
the Kathmandu Valley. In its unique and sacred Hindu and Buddhist
landscape can be found seven separate World Heritage Sites, a
concentration of monuments unmatched anywhere else in the world.
Yet a month before the earthquake hit, Nepalese art was already in
the headlines on the other side of the globe, as art market prices
for Himalayan Buddhist treasures reached new highs in the latest
round of auctions amid a spate of seizures of stolen
art.
Over the
past few years, demand for Buddhist art has rocketed, driven
primarily by the new generation of superrich Chinese collectors
obsessed with reclaiming parts of what they consider their lost
cultural heritage.
New York
has traditionally been a major hub of the market for South
Asian,
Himalayan, and Chinese antiquities. In recent years the city’s
dealer-led Asia Week initiative, arranged around the March
auctions, has exploded into an event-filled jamboree organized to
accommodate a free-spending nine days of antiquities shopping among
this new and burgeoning Chinese clientele.
This year,
all eyes were on a seven-part auction at Christie’s of Chinese,
South Asian, and European antiquities belonging to the late Robert
Hatfield Ellsworth, a New York dealer and connoisseur known as
the King of Ming. At this prodigiously hyped, 2,000-lot marathon
sale, which recalled the giant collection auctions of an earlier
age, the star Himalayan object was a two-foot-high gilt-bronze
image of Avalokiteshvara, the bodhisattva of compassion, a
spectacular example of 13th-century Nepalese sculpture that once
stood on a mantelpiece in Ellsworth’s 22-room Manhattan apartment.
The $8,229,000 paid by an anonymous, but almost certainly Chinese,
bidder went far beyond the $3 million high estimate, setting a
new record price for a work of art from Nepal. Like many of the
pieces on offer, it had originally been in the pan-Asian collection
assembled by financier Christian Humann in the 1970s and bought by
Ellsworth after Humann’s death in 1981.
“The
Ellsworth collection was unique,” says Sandhya Jain-Patel, head of
the Indian and Southeast Asian art department at Christie’s New
York. “I don’t think we will see anything like it
again.”
For Chinese
collectors, Buddhist art is an increasingly fashionable alternative
to the overheated contemporary art market. The rise of Chinese
nationalism and the re-embracing of traditional culture that was
once so brutally repressed by the Cultural Revolution have made the
reclamation of the spiritually and artistically rich heritage of
esoteric Himalayan Buddhism an attractive counterpoint to rampant
21st-century materialism. More than anything else, this new taste
has focused on the patronage of the third and fifth emperors of the
Ming Dynasty, Yongle and Xuande, who embraced Tibetan Buddhism
during the first half of the 15th century. Their rule heralded a
rich phase of imperial patronage and cultural florescence that saw
the construction of the Forbidden City in the new capital of
Beijing.
Yongle
artists, if not actually Nepalese in origin, were certainly working
in the same traditions of classical Newari metalwork that had been
disseminated throughout the monasteries and shrines of the
Himalayan region by traveling guilds of craftsmen, many of them
Buddhist monks themselves.
A small,
Yongle-era gilt-copper-alloy deity from a Vajrabhairava shrine was
the top lot for Bonhams during its Asia Week auctions; it sold for
$893,000, more than doubling its high estimate of $350,000. An
image of the sun god Surya, it is believed to have been one of
eight Hindu deities from the base of a monumental throne, an
example of the religious syncretism characteristic of the Tibetan
Buddhism patronized in the Yongle court.
The second
half of the 20th century saw many Buddhist treasures transported
out of Asia, to end up in museums and private collections in Europe
and America. For many Chinese collectors, bringing these works of
art back home is now a matter of national pride as well as
spiritual merit. In October 2013 a large, Yongle-era gilt-bronze
image of a seated Shakyamuni Buddha whipped up frenzied competition
among big-spending Chinese collectors at Sotheby’s Hong Kong. Zheng
Huaxing, the collector who eventually bought for it for
$30.3 million—a world record for Chinese
sculpture—theatrically bowed toward the cardinal points of the room
before prostrating himself in prayer in front of the Buddha statue
after the sale.
The wild
spending shows no signs of abating. Last November at Christie’s
Hong Kong, a magnificent silk thangka depicting the deity Rakta Yamari,
which had changed hands for only $4 million in 2002, sold for
$45 million. The buyer was Liu Yiqian, an investment tycoon
and onetime taxi driver who, with his wife, Wang Wei, owns China’s
largest private museum, in Shanghai, and has spent
$115 million on art in the last year alone. Liu continued
racking up the purchases in New York, spending nearly
$19 million on two Buddhist works. One was a 39-leaf,
gold-on-blue Ming Dynasty Buddhist sutra, estimated by Sotheby’s at
$100,000 to $150,000, which triggered a bidding war that ramped the
price up to $14 million, making it the week’s top lot. His
other buy was a fabulous 11th- to 12th-century Tibetan bronze
seated yogi that once stood on the headboard in Ellsworth’s
bedroom, for which Liu paid $4.9 million. Ever the extrovert,
the night before the auction Liu posted pictures of himself on
social media dressed only in his underwear and seated in the same
lotus position as the statue.
According
to dealer Fabio Rossi of London- and Hong Kong–based Rossi &
Rossi, Chinese taste is evolving fast as increasing numbers of new
collectors become active in the market. “The Chinese are on a rapid
learning curve,” he says. “Traditionally, Chinese buyers have been
concerned with good condition and perfect gilding, but now we are
seeing them becoming more aware of the subtleties of the
field.”
“There are
strong collecting communities in Taiwan and Hong Kong as well as
mainland China,” adds Rossi. These buyers are served by an
ever-growing number of dealers and agents as well as auction houses
such as Hanhai in Beijing, which has its own dedicated Buddhist art
department. In addition to China’s numerous private museums, Asian
institutions actively collecting include the National Palace Museum
in Taipei and the Singapore Asian Civilisations Museum.
At this
year’s tefaf in Maastricht, one of the standout Himalayan pieces
exhibited by Rossi & Rossi was an exceptionally large gilt and
cast-copper image of a seated Vajra-dhara, a spectacular example of
Nepalese repoussé work probably made in a Tibetan monastery in the
16th century—although the crown is likely 19th century—for
which the dealers are asking around $2 million.
“Whereas
Tibetan sculptures were locked up in monasteries and venerated as
treasures, in Nepal worshippers always had direct contact with the
images of their deities,” notes Edward Wilkinson, a Himalayan art
specialist at Bonhams. “They would be rubbed, fed, anointed with
liquids, painted, and sprinkled with colored powders.” The
resulting imperfect condition of Nepalese bronzes has traditionally
discouraged Chinese buyers, but has been one of the aspects most
appreciated by collectors in the West.
“Nepalese
bronzes are very rare, but for Chinese collectors, condition is
still an issue,” says Rossi. “New Chinese collectors will generally
look at Tibet first, but their taste and knowledge are evolving
fast.”
The kind of
pristine condition most in demand is exemplified by the top-priced
sculpture in Sotheby’s Asia week sale of Himalayan, Indian, and
Southeast Asian art: a fine Tibetan gilt-copper-alloy figure of
Chakrasamvara
and his consort, Vajravarahi in ecstatic union
(est. $400–600,000), which sold for $1,570,000.
There is
clearly a danger that the deep-pocketed Chinese will monopolize the
market. Chinese dealers or agents scrupulously monitor all levels
of the trade. “If a Himalayan piece comes up in an auction in New
Orleans, they will be there,” says Wilkinson. “Now we are even
seeing them buying Indian Buddhist art such as Gandharan or Pala
works.”
According
to John Eskenazi, a London dealer with long experience selling
Himalayan art, there are still collectors in Europe and America who
are seriously focused on this field, many originally inspired by
groundbreaking exhibitions
in the 1980s like those curated by Pratapaditya Pal at the
Los Angeles County Museum of Art. “The appeal of Nepalese art
is that it is in favor of compassion,” Eskenazi says. “Not only is
it very rare, but it has a very approachable quality compared with
Tibetan art and has always been collected with great enthusiasm in
the West.”
One of the
most high-profile collections of Himalayan art to emerge in recent
years has been that assembled by Shelley and Donald Rubin and
displayed at the Rubin Museum, a former Barneys department store in
Manhattan.
The more
wealthy American museums are also prepared to make purchases, often
acting with the help of donors. In 2012, the Metropolitan Museum of
Art in New York bought a rare 11th-century Nepalese bronze of
Vishnu riding on Garuda, while the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, in
Richmond, has made a number of acquisitions including that of a
spectacular 12th- to 13th-century Nepalese ritual crown, gilded and
set with jewels.
The
existence of a further potential market was also demonstrated last
December when Pundole’s auction house in Mumbai sold Himalayan art
from the collection of the late Roshan
Sabavala, the widow of a Parsi industrialist who had acquired most
of the 121 lots in Delhi in the 1950s and ’60s. The sale was a
tremendous success, although, since many of the pieces were not
exportable from India, prices never reached the stratospheric
levels that Chinese interest has generated
elsewhere. The top lot was a gilt-bronze image of Hevajra, made in
Nepal in the 13th or 14th century, which sold for just over
$400,000. International awareness and legislation over matters of
stolen cultural heritage have been increasing in recent years, but
the sale and collecting of antiquities from Nepal and Tibet have
always retained a degree of controversy. Stolen and smuggled Asian
antiquities have recently been the subject of a major federal
investigation into the activities of New York art dealer Subhash
Kapoor, who is currently in prison in Chennai, India. The Manhattan
District Attorney’s Office released details last April of the
largest seizure of antiquities in United States history, most from
storage units belonging to Kapoor. The majority were Indian, but
among the pieces confiscated were also a considerable number of
bronze figures and ritual artifacts from Nepal and
Tibet.
In recent
years, efforts have increased among Nepali scholars and
conservationists to trace the missing heritage of the Kathmandu
Valley. Jürgen Schick, author of The
Gods Are Leaving the Country: Art Theft from Nepal, 2006,
estimates that 90 percent of the major pieces of Nepalese sculpture
outside Nepal have been smuggled out of the country since the
1960s, when Nepal first opened its doors to Western tourism,
becoming a favorite destination on the hippie trail and later for
trekking and mountaineering. The whole of the Kathmandu Valley was
declared a World Heritage Site as far back as 1979, but the great
number of individual sites and shrines has made it almost
impossible to defend from looters comprehensively.
Nepal’s
porous borders and high level of corruption have further encouraged
the flow of precious art out of the country. Of course, it may
often be difficult if not impossible to determine when a particular
work of art left the shrine it was made for and who legitimately
owned it before it left the country.
Auction
houses and dealers are all aware that it is more necessary than
ever to research the provenance of anything they propose to sell.
In reality this means ensuring that it will not later be revealed
to have been stolen.
“We work
hard to do our due diligence,” says Jain-Patel of Christie’s. “Two
years ago we were informed that a set of 12th-century Nepalese
painted wooden book covers had been stolen from the National
Library in Kathmandu, and we immediately withdrew them from the
auction and arranged for them to be returned.”
The Musée
Guimet in Paris, too, has expressed a willingness to return stolen
works, including an 11th-century figure of Uma-Maheshvara taken
from Bhaktapur in 1984 and a 12th-century figure of Vishnu with
Lakshmi and Garuda stolen from Patan in the late 1970s. The Nepali
authorities have been criticized, however, for their lack of
initiative in arranging the proper legal procedures for such
repatriations. Whether the earthquake and its aftermath will prove
an incentive or a distraction is difficult to tell.
How much
the Buddhist art market will continue to flourish at its current
level is also hard to predict. It may hinge on the Chinese economy,
which, as of this writing, has been cooling. Any art market boom
always carries with it the specter of a forthcoming crash, but in
the case of Himalayan bronzes, the signs seem to indicate that the
only way is up.