Artist Xu Beihong's 'Slave and Lion' painting to fetch over $45 mn at Hong Kong auction

The painting was sold in 2006 at $6.9 mn, record at the time for a Chinese oil painting.

Reuters
The story behind the 'Slave and Lion' painting is rooted in Roman mythology, according to Christie's presentation.
HONG KONG: Auction house Christie's unveiled on Monday what it called "the highest-estimated Asian artwork" to ever go under the hammer, a Xu Beihong painting called "Slave and Lion," which it expects to fetch between $45 million and $58 million.

The 1924-dated painting by Xu, who is regarded as one of the most important figures of Chinese realism, will go on public preview in Beijing and Shanghai this month before being auctioned in Hong Kong on May 24.

The painting was sold in the global financial hub in 2006 at Christie's for HK$53.9 million ($6.9 million), a record at the time for a Chinese oil painting.


"The market at the very top is very strong; (there is) a lot of demand, extremely driven by rarity, which is exactly what this work is about," Christie's Asia Pacific President Francis Belin said.

The story behind the painting is rooted in Roman mythology, according to Christie's presentation.

A runaway slave was captured and, as punishment, thrown into the Colosseum with a lion. But the animal did not attack the slave, who had earlier removed a thorn stuck in the lion's paw. The slave and the lion were eventually set free.
ADVERTISEMENT
Vase, Gold Egg & A Rock: Accidental Finds That Cost Millions
1/6
Treasures aren’t always hidden. Sometimes they can be right under your nose, either gathering dust in an attic or lying unclaimed in a thrift store.

A look at seemingly ordinary pieces that were a lot more valuable than expected.
Treasures aren’t always hidden. Sometimes they can be right under your nose, either gathering dust in an attic or lying unclaimed in a thrift store. A look at seemingly ordinary pieces that were a l..
Read More
In October, a farmer took a rock weighing about 10 kg to the geology department of Central Michigan University for examination. The rock, used by David Mazurek as a door stopper for nearly three decades, turned out to be a meteorite. This rock, which is the sixth biggest meteorite to have been found in Michigan, is estimated to be worth $100,000.

(Image: www.cmich.edu)
In October, a farmer took a rock weighing about 10 kg to the geology department of Central Michigan University for examination. The rock, used by David Mazurek as a door stopper for nearly three dec..
Read More
In 2014, a $14,000 purchase turned into millions of dollars for a scrap dealer in mid-western US. The man, who wished to remain anonymous, had bought a gold egg at a junk market a decade ago, hoping to make a fast buck by reselling the piece for its contents. But it turned out to be one of the eight missing Faberge imperial eggs. The egg, created by Peter Carl Faberge, was gifted by Russian Tsar Alexander III to his wife, Maria Feodorovna, in 1887. Antique dealers valued the egg at $33 million.

(Image: www.wartski.com)
In 2014, a $14,000 purchase turned into millions of dollars for a scrap dealer in mid-western US. The man, who wished to remain anonymous, had bought a gold egg at a junk market a decade ago, hoping..
Read More
In 1989, a Pennsylvanian collector bought a painting at a flea market for $4. When he dismantled the artwork to restore the frame, he found a copy of the American Declaration of Independence. He kept the document thinking it might be a 19th century copy of some value. However, two years later, he discovered that it was one of the original printed copies of the declaration. It was auctioned that year for $2.42 million.

(Representative image: www.sothebys.com)
In 1989, a Pennsylvanian collector bought a painting at a flea market for $4. When he dismantled the artwork to restore the frame, he found a copy of the American Declaration of Independence. He kep..
Read More
A family heirloom stored away in a shoe box in Paris sold for $25 million at Sotheby’s Paris this year. The 18th-century vase from the Qing dynasty of China was left to the grandparents of its last owners. The sale was the highest price reached for a single item sold by the auction house in France.

(Image: www.sothebys.com)
A family heirloom stored away in a shoe box in Paris sold for $25 million at Sotheby’s Paris this year. The 18th-century vase from the Qing dynasty of China was left to the grandparents of its last ..
Read More
In 2015, three brothers from New Jersey decided to get their mother’s belongings valued after her death. Among other items, a dusty, cracked old painting languishing in the basement was valued at a few hundred dollars. This painting portrayed a woman who had fainted and two men trying to revive her with smelling salts. Sharpeyed art aficionados spotted the artwork when it went up for auction and identified it as ‘The Unconscious Patient’ by 17th century Dutch painter Rembrandt. A buyer bought the painting for $1.1 million and then resold it for $4 million to a collector.

(Image: www.theleidencollection.com)
In 2015, three brothers from New Jersey decided to get their mother’s belongings valued after her death. Among other items, a dusty, cracked old painting languishing in the basement was valued at a ..
Read More

Download
The Economic Times Business News App
for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
READ MORE
ADVERTISEMENT

READ MORE:

LOGIN & CLAIM

50 TIMESPOINTS

More from our Partners

Loading next story
Business News › Magazines › Panache › Artist Xu Beihong's 'Slave and Lion' painting to fetch over $45 mn at Hong Kong auction
Text Size:AAA
Success
This article has been saved

*

+