Mon, Oct 15, 2001 - Page 11 News List

Sanyu comes into his own

After being ignored by the art community during his lifetime, the work of Chinese artist Sanyu is now winning high prices at international art auctions

By Vico Lee  /  STAFF REPORTER

Later he began to paint nudes not as they were but merely as an experiment with shapes and forms.

One of the paintings titled Nude depicts a female nude lying with arms around her legs, showing her genitalia which he humorously painted as an exclamation mark, while Four Nudes sleeping on a Gold Tapestry places the nudes in parallel with each other without seeming strained or crowded.

In addition to painting, Sanyu became friends with many artists, who were drawn to him by his good humor and carefree attitude.

Robert Frank, the Swiss-American photographer who was his friend for 20 years and the director of Sanyu, a film commemoration of their friendship, once said that, "Sanyu always saw things in perspective. He shrugged off trivialities to focus on things that meant a lot to him."

Although he had many friends, he intentionally remained detached from strong ties with groups or individuals. While the Chinese community found him eccentric, his European friends knew no more about him than his gentleness and humor.

According to the French journalist Albert Dahan, Sanyu's good friend at the time, shortly before Sanyu's death, he told Dahan that he had just started a new painting, one that would express his solitude and embrace his desire for simplicity. A few days later Sanyu showed him the painting. "It was a miniscule elephant ... running in an immense desert ... pointing to the elephant, he told me, `that's me!'"

Many of Sanyu's later paintings depict wild animals in an expansive, engulfing landscape.

They are said to express his isolation as a freewheeling soul caught in a strange world.

In 1988, the Taipei Fine Arts Museum held China-Paris: Seven Chinese Painters Who Studied in France, 1918 to 1960, a pioneering exhibition that featured Sanyu's works. It was the first exhibition to place him in the company of other important 20th century Chinese, such as Xu Bei-hong and Liu Hai-su (劉海粟).

Sotheby's inaugural auction in Taipei four years later included an oil painting by Sanyu, which went and sold for almost three times its presale estimate.

This set the stage for the first exhibition and sale of Sanyu's works at the Dimension Art Center(帝門藝術中心) in Taipei the next month.

The turnabout in recognition of Sanyu's paintings has been dramatic. "The first people to appreciate Sanyu's paintings and sense their market potential were Asians. Now Americans, after the Europeans, also begin to realize his significance. The fusion of Western and Chinese elements appeals to collectors across cultures," said Vinci Chang (張嘉珍), an art specialist at Christie's 20th century Chinese art department.

As to why this belated recognition has come 40 years after the death of the artist, Chang said that Sanyu's habit of always using less than three colors and the paintings' simple yet harmonious composition are in line with the current minimalist trend.

Art Notes

To celebrate the 100th anniversary of Sanyu, the National Museum of History is holding In Search of a Homeland -- The Art of Sanyu, an exhibition of over 129 paintings by Sanyu including nudes, still life and landscape and animal paintings. The exhibition is open until Dec. 2.

An accompanying exhibition, Woman and Cat -- Models of Sanyu, at the Lin and Keng Gallery (大未來畫廊), shows mainly Sanyu's works on paper, which are predominantly nude sketches. The 60 works will be on show until Nov. 4.

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