China. Ink on paper, with a Japanese silk brocade mounting. Exquisitely painted with a flowering plum tree in the winter, the branches and twigs mostly upright with few hanging down, the blossoms and buds neatly detailed, the thicker branches executed with bold, dynamic brushstrokes.
Inscriptions: Lower right, signed ‘Baishi weng’ (old man Baishi), inscribed ‘The winter plum blossoms and the rest of the year, a thousand-year friendship with the rest of the year’, and dated ‘in the Winter of the Year of Guihai’ (corresponding to 1923). The last character (託) indicates that this work was painted by Qi Baishi in order to entrust it to the recipient.
Provenance: Kono Shuson, Japan, acquired directly from the artist. A private collection, acquired from the above, and thence by descent. The back with an old Japanese paper label from Kono Shuson, stamped and inscribed ‘Dai yonhyaku-ju-roku-go, Sai Hakuseki sensei, Kono Shuson sei’ (Number 416, Painting of Winter Plum Blossoms by Master Qi Baishi, compounded by Kono Shuson). Two further paper labels, each inscribed ‘7541’. Kono Shuson (1890-1987) was a Japanese painter and a pivotal figure in promoting the Nanga (Chinese literati) school of paintings in Japan. With Tomioka Tessai (1836-1924) as a consultant, he founded the Nihon Nanga-in (Japan Literati Painting Academy) and visited China frequently, including his first documented visit in 1923, the year the present work was painted. This is when he probably met Qi Baishi for the very first time, shortly after Qi’s initial exhibition in Japan (see lot essay below). He then began to import Qi Baishi’s works to Japan, together with the paintings of other contemporary Chinese artists, selling them at the Takashimaya Department Store and other notable places. He always mounted such paintings on Japanese kakejiku scrolls. For a work bearing a similar label from Kono Shuson, see for example Bonhams Hong Kong, 2 March 2022, lot 29, by Zhang Daqian (1899-1983), Scholar under Willow Tree.
Condition: Good condition with some wear, soiling, and few minor abrasions.
Dimensions: Image size 106.5 x 56 cm, Size incl. mounting 144 x 68 cm
Qi Baishi painted plum blossoms in several styles, including copies of those painted by Jin Nong (1687-1763), which the present lot shares some affinities with, including the absence of colors. Qi Baishi's later plum paintings are primarily inspired by Wu Changshuo (1844-1927), who preferred bright colors and introduced an epigraphic aesthetic to the art of painting. Here however, Qi depicts the plum tree with its upward trunk and branches in calligraphic strokes of somber ink. The present painting can therefore be said to reflect an earlier style in painting plum blossoms for Qi Baishi, whose earliest works depicting this subject are dated by inscription to the year 1921, two years before the present work was executed. Qi's paintings are, first of all, reflections of things and feelings that he had personally experienced in life. In the case of plum blossoms, his fondness of this subject resulted from nostalgia for his hometown in Hunan, where his dwelling, named ‘Studio of Hundred Plums’, was surrounded by a plum grove.
Qi Baishi (1864-1957) is one of the world’s most important artists of the 20th century and has received countless honors and awards like no other painter in the People's Republic of China. He began his career as a carpenter, though he taught himself to paint using a manual from the Qin dynasty period. His style, which Qi Baishi developed in the second half of his life, is characterized by a powerful, spontaneous brushstroke. He expanded his subject matter to insects, birds, figures, animals, vegetation, and landscapes, and began to incorporate rich color into his compositions, painting in an ever-freer style. His works are focused on the spiritual, ephemeral, and mystical qualities of the human condition. In 1953, he was elected president of the China Artists Association, and one year later he was elected to the National People’s Congress.
Qi Baishi moved to Beijing in 1916 and earned his living there by selling paintings. However, his painting style was not welcome in Beijing at that time. Taking the advice of Chen Shizeng, Qi Baishi began his famous "initiating self-art-reform in senile age", which finally led Qi Baishi to tremendous success. In 1922, Chen Shizeng visited Japan. He brought some works by Qi Baishi for exhibition and sale. This was the first time that Qi Baishi's paintings were shown in Japan, and anywhere outside China. It is probable that Kono Shuson (the first owner of the present work) saw Qi’s work at this exhibition and was inspired to make his first trip to China less than a year later in 1923, meeting with the master for the first time. As recalled by Qi Baishi: “After Chen Shizeng returned to Beijing, I was told that all my paintings sold at very nice prices! Each of my paintings sold for at least 100 silver coins, and the landscape paintings were even more expensive, 250 silver coins for one that was only 60 inches long! I never imagined such prices in China! And I was also told that the French planned to exhibit my works and those of Shizeng in the Paris Art Expo. The Japanese were going to film my life and work for a movie! All this was just amazing! Afterwards, many foreigners came to Beijing to purchase my paintings, and I have been better off since then. It was Shizeng who helped me in my career and life - I will remember this forever.” (Baishi Laoren Zishu, Shandong Huabao Publishing House, 2000, pp. 131-133)
Auction result comparison:
Type: Related
Auction: Beijing Council International Auctions, 4 December 2013, lot 984
Price: CNY 632,500 or approx. EUR 110,000 converted and adjusted for inflation at the time of writing
Description: Qi Baishi, The ink plum blossom (1923)
Expert remark: Compare the related manner of painting with mostly upright branches and using only ink. Note that the work was painted in the same year (1923) as the present lot.
Auction result comparison:
Type: Related
Auction: Poly International, Beijing, 17 December 2017, lot 1930
Price: CNY 862,500 or approx. EUR 142,000 converted and adjusted for inflation at the time of writing
Description: Qi Baishi, Plum blossom (1924)
Expert remark: Compare the related manner of painting, also using only ink, but with more hanging branches than the present lot. Note that the work was painted one year later (1924) than the present lot.
Auction result comparison:
Type: Related
Auction: Christie’s New York, 9 December 2020, lot 48
Price: USD 18,750 or approx. EUR 20,500 converted and adjusted for inflation at the time of writing
Description: Qi Baishi (with signature of, 1863-1957), Plum Blossoms
Expert remark: Note the much smaller size (26.5 x 19 cm) of this work and the low estimate of only USD 300-600, which was clearly overruled by the market, with bidding eventually ending at USD 18,750.
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