Uncategorized

2015 年 10 月 13 日

The Soul of the Shanghai World’s Fair aptured

Lawrence Jeppson (an art consultant, historian, curator, writer, editor, publisher, lecturer, and appraiser.)

  As we go deeper into the 21st century, Dr. Tsing-fang Chen stands alone as the most important artist working the world stage today. By comparison, any other living artist you encounter--in exhibitions or examined in the media--is parochial, working within a narrow esthetic and cultural range.

As a world-class artist Chen is Number One. Atop that pinnacle, he is alone.

There is no doubt in my mind that in time Chen’s paintings are destined to be found in every significant public, corporate, or private collection in the world. Every great museum that recognizes 20th and 21st century art will scramble to add his work to their collections.

Using his brilliant gifts of color, composition, and philosophical genius, Chen continues to create an astounding universe which examines anything and everything going on in the world. He cunningly unites past, present, and future. He makes use of every available visual icon to create Chen’s World of juxtaposed, colorful, vibrant, and exciting visions. Chen is a recorder, interpreter, and fore-teller of what is going on in the world–and in human hearts and brains.

Chen’s brilliant torrent of great paintings has brought him high recognition as “Cultural Ambassador for Tolerance and Peace Through the Arts” from the United Nations.

 
1欢迎参加2010上海世博Wellcome To Shanghai Expo 201080X100cm (M)#22逛豫园,迎世博Visiting Yuyuan before Expo130X194cm_Web_LL
His suite of paintings Towards the 21st Century, Symphony of World Culture, a towering group of end-to-end canvases measuring 110" high by 560" in total length, is the most prodigious work of contemporary painting that I know of. (Its closest counterparts in art would be in modern French tapestries, Jean Lurçat’s monumental group La Chant du Monde and Mathieu Mategot’s only partially realized series Visions of Space. Both artists are deceased.)

The Chen creations are possible because they cascade from a man whose formation is deeply rooted in the East and expanded in the West. He is not a bridge between East and West but a shrewd, perceptive amalgamater of both. He is not only on the world stage; he is the world stage.

Chen accomplishes this by taking images from every source–any art, old or new, any period, history, archaeology, geography, news events, philosophy, imagination. Any thing the eye can see has the potential to become one of his building blocks. He blends these blocks into new visions that the eye has never seen before.

Every Chen painting exists on several levels. The first is a kind of visual pleasure or disruption. Usually the former. It is made up of composition and color. Sometimes these paintings seem simple enough. Sometimes composition and color are extremely complex. But lurking below the surface of immediate esthetic pleasure or displeasure are myriads of meanings. Why is Chen saying this? What does this mean? The viewer is enticed to think and respond. These responses may change every time the viewer looks at the painting. There are always new things to perceive, new ways to understand. And that is the essence of great art–repeated esthetic discovery and emotional/intellectual stimulation.

 
(M)#26阳光谷,太阳能颂Sunshine Valley, Ode to Sun-Energy80X100cm (M)#30繁星下的阳光谷The Sunshine Valley under Stary Night97X130 cm
Chen’s art life began as a conflict between his Chinese heritage bred in his native Taiwan and his encounter with Western art and thought, especially during a dozen years in Paris. Was he an Oriental or an Occidental? He began trying to blend the two, a blending which achieved its public focus at his first museum exhibition in America, at the Philadelphia Art Alliance in 1978, and the coinage of the word Neo-Iconography to describe his art. The show and the label helped the world to crystallize its understanding of what Chen was doing, and perhaps it helped the artist to understand as well.

  An interesting side-bar about Chen is that although his Neo-Iconography makes him the great world painter, he is also brilliant when he paints landscapes, Formosan folklore, city streets and buildings, and interpretive portraits.

A few years after Philadelphia, Chen became caught up in the coming centennial of the Statue of Liberty, 1888-1988. He had seen Liberty on his fist visits to the United States from France and when he came as a new emigrant, which would lead to his American citizenship. If the Statue of Liberty was going to be 100 years old, he would create 100 paintings as an appropriate commemoration. Every painting would be a different interpretation, and these paintings would employ a slew of icons. I had the honor of writing the lead article to the colorful exhibition catalog. It is appropriate here to quote two paragraphs from that introduction:

(M)#2黄浦江世博梦Shanghai Expo Dream upon Huangpu River_Web_LL The eye-popping cargo of Liberty litanies is also a hosanna to the flowering of Neo-Iconography, which is a limitless way of uniting time and space and esthetic diversity into fresh artistic expressions and insights. Neo-Iconography can make us think, feel, and even laugh.

As the Prophet, Seer, and Revelator for Neo-Iconography, Chen appropriates visual images from man’s treasury of art and experiences and imaginatively molds them into beautiful and powerful new paintings. These paintings reward us with fresh thrills and insights without cutting us off from our visual heritage. . .he has bound together, in a saturated vision, the cultures of Asia, Europe, and America to create this astonishing tribute to the Statue of Liberty.

The number of different icons utilized in the Liberty series is in the hundreds.

Other centennials were coming.

The Eiffel Tower in Paris was only a year younger than the Statue of Liberty. It was erected for the World’s Fair of 1889. Chen had studied and painted in Paris for a dozen years. He knew and loved Gustave Eiffel’s iconic metal machination. This required another 100 paintings. With so little time between the Liberty and Eiffel centennials, Chen had to paint night and day. It was helpful that his wife Lucia was a genius of another kind, a collaborator who understood the importance of her husband’s work and could manage the family and commerce in such a way as to allow him full attention to his painting.

Hard on the heels of the Liberty and Eiffel centennials came the 100th anniversary of Vincent Van Gogh’s death, 1990. Another 100 paintings were needed. This towering Dutch/French Post-impressionist is one of Chen’s favorite artists, and a myriad of Van Gogh shards find homes in Chen’s paintings. So Chen went to his easels and in white-hot frenzy painted the 100 paintings commemorating the artist’s passing from the scene. Like the Liberty 100 and the Eiffel 100, the Van Gogh 100 sizzled and snapped. They achieved the homage Chen sought. The paintings were exhibited and widely acclaimed in the Netherlands. And other places.

Chen set out to do 100 paintings about Las Vegas, Nevada, sometimes referred to as “Sin City” because of its gambling, divorce access, and flamboyant visual shatterings. Chen was not doing this as a homage, as he had done in the three previous 100-painting floods, but as an exploration of the Vegas visual cacophony and all its comic and social ramifications. I believe Chen abandoned this pursuit before it reached 100, as he found worthier subjects.

A worthier subject was the 2008 Olympic Games held in Beijing. Again, 100 paintings, maybe more. The best athletes came from all over the world, and China put on a fabulous show. Here again, as in the United Nations work, Chen proved himself a world-class artist. There were tensions, successes, failures in the diverse events. In the totality there was great excitement and great success. Hundreds of photographers shot every event and painters put some of the individual achievements on canvas or computer-generated images, but only Chen succeeded in doing the whole Olympics, capturing and lifting their spirit in visual extravaganza.

Not everyone could be at the Games, but Chen’s work is forever memorialized in the very big book Dr. T. F. Chen’s Art & the Olympics: an Art for Humanity, published in Chinese and English.

Hard on the heals of the Olympics, the excitement in China moved south, to the 2010 Shanghai Worlds’ Fair.

In a lifetime of more than eight decades I have been privileged to view art at International Expositions (World’s Fairs) in San Francisco, Bruxelles, Seattle, Montreal, and New York; at big-time international art fairs in New York, Washington, Paris, Basle, Venice, and Madrid; at hundreds of museums and galleries in the United States, Canada, Europe, and Asia. These have given me a wide, profound, and varied experience, visiting and thinking about man’s artistic means and manipulations over several millennia.

(M)#36英国馆United Kingdom Pavilion130X194cm As I think back over these many manifestations, I see that most of them were narrow in scope. ARCO in Madrid, the Basle Art Fair, the Biennale in Venice are all composed of individual pavilions or booths which, usually, fixate on a single painter or a small national group.

Many of the most impressive museum shows to penetrate my lasting consciousness have been one-man retrospectives: Jan Vermeer at the National Gallery, Washington, Emile Nolde in a museum in Tokyo, James Rosenquist at the Houston Museum, and Jasper Johns at the Reina Sophia in Madrid.

Naturally, most of the art pavilions at the world’s fairs tend to be nationalistic, and the most prominent artistic manifestations tend to be architectural: the Atomium in Bruxelles, the Space Needle in Seattle, the Buckminister Fuller Geodesic Dome in New York.

Then came the World’s Fair to trump all World’s Fairs: the massive, encompassing, and pulsating Shanghai World’s Fair of 2010. And unlike all these other manifestations I have alluded to, there was a single artist with the skill, intelligence, and stamina to make a binding interpretation of the entire fair. No souvenir book of photographs (or scholarly examination for that matter) will ever approach the vivacity, beauty, understanding, drama, and intellectual and emotional penetration as the 100 paintings of the Fair done by Dr. Tsing-fang Chen, a Taiwanese American.

Chen is without peer. He is the most intellectually and internationally challenging artist at work anywhere in the world today. Although organized to show the world, including itself, China’s place in the world, the six-month Fair, more than any other ever organized, showed off the global world and its myriad cultures, that whole world of which China is a part. Chen set about to capture the entire spirit of the Fair and its many breath-taking components. So far as I am aware, no one has ever done this for any previous World’s Fair, Art Fair, or museum/gallery manifestation.

Chen accomplished this by studying each pavilion, its outward symbols, its inner meaning, its people, its places, its reality, and its aspirations. Then, using his brilliant mind and his highly developed genius for finding and combining a plethora of icons, he painted a philosophical and esthetic portrait of each of the pavilions, one by one.

When taken as a body, this collection of paintings captures, more than any photographic reportage can ever do, the soul of the Fair.

An icon can be any visual entity. Chen’s genius does not rest just on his ability to choose icons. The genius also demands visual success in depicting and arranging these icons and in the artist’s extraordinary command of compositional color. Chen’s bright and juxtaposed colors jab right into the heart of emotional responses. Few painters have that gift.

 
(M)#40韩国馆Republic of Korea Pavilion130X194cm_Web_LL Japan
Because of the paintings’ complexities, viewers many not immediately recognize everything they are seeing. That is one of the marvels of great paintings: a viewer can always find something new not seen before. But to help viewers see new things and better understand what they are beholding, Julie Chen, daughter of Tsing-fang and Lucia, has developed an acute and concise way of unlocking keys to many of her father’s paintings. Father and daughter both have gifts for the world, as does the Chen’s son, Ted and his term produce giclée limited edition of Chen’s work.

Chen’s interpretations of the World’s Fair pavilions give us a suite of exciting paintings that have captured the world, one oil at a time. For many viewers, paintings they like most will be the ones that come closest to their own culture. The ones they should study hardest are ones that bring them new understanding. Because of space limitations, from this flow of extraordinary art I can mention only a few for my special comments.

  As one would expect, one of the most arresting paintings of these 100 is the depiction of the host city, Shanghai.

Shanghai. Shanghai is composed of four, maybe five, irregularly shaped horizontal bands of images. The top band shows a sky full of fireworks, clear across the width of the painting. Its architectural images begin, on the left, with yellow steps leading up to a red box and then the reversed terrace of an immense overhanging roof of the xxxxxxxxxxxxx. In the center of the widening first band is the Oriental Pearl TV Tower, with its three metallic spheres–a dance hall, a rotating restaurant, and an observation deck-- reassembling jewels. Chen has interpreted this structure in bright yellow and red, and it could just as easily be imagined as a rocket ready for liftoff, either way being a symbol of high technological achievement. To the right, in bright colors is a grouping of skyscrapers, which bring to mind the 88-story Jinmao Tower, the 110-story Shanghai World Financial Center, and the 120-floor Shanghai Tower, among many skyscrapers that show just how far the world’s most populous city has come from a sleepy fishing village in just over a century.

This top band ends on the right in a large oval, like a picture frame, across the middle of which is an icon of the new Lupu Bridge, the world’s longest arch bridge. To the left, and closer to the eye, a large river crane, animated and ready to work any of the freighter craft that ply the waterway. The river is painted bright red, color of good luck, and the sky above the bridge is bright sun-light yellow.

The next band down is a closer paean to Shanghai’s passion for skyscrapers, among them the historic Clock Tower Building, which houses Shanghai’s Museum of Art. This band of buildings is depicted in bright, bright colors against dark, dark blue sky. The brightly lit buildings are built shoulder to shoulder and could be imagined as a band of blinding battlements.

The third band changes scale. It is personalized, humanized. It begins with a pretty girl in party dress, then dancing couples enjoying a dance band, and next another pretty girl in red dress playing a stringed instrument.

  The fourth and fifth bans are narrow and seem to merge. On the left, in the largest area of green in the painting, is an icon which may suggest a farm, and next to it several old-time, blue-roofed, white buildings along a river. The merged bands end in a large, traditional gate and a summoning of the Yu Yuan Garden, started in 1559 during the Ming dynasty.

(M)#31法国馆(A)劳动、祈祷、大发展• France Pavilion(A)Work, Pray, Great Development 97X130cm France. The painting inspired by the French pavilion is the least complicated of Chen’s Fair outpourings. Its arresting elements are interpretations of two of the most famous sculptures by the most-highly esteemed sculptor of the modern age: August Rodin’s The Thinker, painted in bronze, and The Kiss, painted in gold. The Kiss, the passionate depiction of a couple in love was originally intended as an element of Rodin’s complex Gates of Hell, but the sculptor gave it an independent existence. The Thinker reveals a man in sober meditation battling powerful inner turmoil. The two sculptures and Chen’s selection of them for this painting dramatize a human confict between two necessary forces, passion and thought. By putting the images on the top of a roof, Chen emphasizes their overpowering importance.   Taiwan. This painting is a glorious amalgam of icons, but it is so excitedly pleasing that it is completely unnecessary to recognize any of those icons to appreciate its wonder. In the lower corners are three costumed figures, which many viewers will recognize, and between and above them cartouches jammed with abbreviated images. The top half of the canvas is a deluge of lighted lanterns, each with its own succinct calligraphy, which will give a dimension to the painting for Chinese viewers that the rest of us will not grasp. That will not lessen our appreciation for the wonders of the painting. Even Chen’s signature centered on the base of the painting becomes an integral icon of the composition.

(M)#46可口可乐馆CocaCola Pavilion122.4X145.5cm_Web_LL Coca-Cola. Not all of the pavilions were national. Among the many commercial pavilions, Chen has selected Coca-Cola. Coke had modest beginnings. In 1886, John Pemberton, proprietor of Eagle Drug and Chemical, a drugstore in Columbus, Georgia concocted a non-alcoholic beverage after the county passed a law banning alcohol. From that start, Coke bottling plants have sprung up all over the world. Today Coke is sold in 200 countries, making it the most ubiquitous product on the planet. In the process Coca-Cola swallowed up dozens of other beverage makers including Minute-Maid and Fanta and hundreds of products. A visitor to the World of Coca-Cola museum in Atlanta, Georgia can sample 60 of the company’s products, many of which are concocted to accommodate local taste. In this painting Chen has made 54 interpretations of the Coca-Cola bottle from around the world. On the surface, this painting might call to mind American Pop Art, but where artists like Andy Warhol made slavish, repetitive replications of common products, every Chen bottle is vibrantly alive and different. Some are a mixture of icons. This painting is a lot of fun!

Australia–like a large island surrounded by the blue of oceans and wild birds, which suggest freedom. The island itself is more in the shape of Ayer’s Rock than the actual continent. The rock itself is alive with an amalgam of icons which suggest Australia’s varied geography, history, and cultures.

Shanxi summons up history that archaeologically goes back 180 million years up to the current day. Its colors are alive in contrasts and eyeful juxtapositions.

Macau’s colors and composition brim with the excitement of the place, and the Gansu depiction merges the cultural importance of place, dramatized by the dancers, with a sweeping encapsulated view of a modern city, while the Nepal canvas by contrast is one of Buddhist serenity and enlightenment.

One of my favorites, because of its compositional color, is the Shanghai Corporate Joint Pavilion interpretation, even though its icons are fewer and muted. In contrast the dramatic Republic of Korea is so chock-full of icons that there are almost too many to count, making it a painting which will be looked at and marveled over many times.

  Lawrence Jeppson has been a renowned international art and art investment consultant, historian, curator, writer, editor, publisher, lecturer, and appraiser for nearly half a century.. Through the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service, the American Federation of Arts, NY’s Museum of Modern Art, and his own Art Circuit Services; Jeppson has been a contributor to more than 200 art exhibitions around the world.

2015 年 10 月 21 日

The Art of Dr. Tsing-Fang Chen

47a499a548c43da0700a5bc69bd80fe1-771x1024.jpg

● Lawrence Jeppson,an art consultant, organizer and curator of art exhibitions, writer, editor and publisher, lecturer, art historian, and appraiser., He is expert on the works of several painters, including, Tsing-fang Chen, about whom he has written several books.

An Appraisal and Investment Recommendation

  Lawrence Jeppson is an art consultant, organizer and curator of art exhibitions, writer, editor and publisher, lecturer, art historian, and appraiser., He is expert on the works of several painters, including, Tsing-fang Chen, about whom he has written several books. Through the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service, the American Federation of Arts, New York’s Museum of Modern Art, and his own Art Circuit Services he has been a contributor to more than 200 art exhibitions in the United States, Canada, Japan. He owns AcroEditions, which publishes multiple-original art, and was co-founder and artistic director of Collectors’ Investment Fund.

Essential Background In order to make an appraisal of the art of Dr. Tsing-fang Chen, it is essential that I present some background, both as to the importance of the artist and his work and to my special competence to analysis its current market and its long-range potential.

Dr. Tsing-fang Chen is a painter of extraordinary talent and world-class importance. His visionary brush opens mixing canals between huge and forbidding cultural oceans and digs deep toeholds into the steep telltales of time. In short, shorn of figures of speech, he is an illustrious painter who thinks and a profound thinker who paints.

There is an extensive biography and description of Dr. Chen’s artistic develop-ment in my book The Neo-Iconography of Tsing-fang Chen. Chen and I began our long association while he was still a French resident. I was among the first to understand what he was doing with his paints, brushes, and canvases, and to explain this to people who had no clue, I coined the term Neo-Iconography, wrote and designed my first book about him, and obtained Chen’s first museum exhibition in the United States at the Philadelphia Art Alliance in 1978.

The Neo-Iconography of Tsing-fang Chen became a key to understanding how Chen takes familiar symbols and subjects from various periods of Western and Oriental art and visual habit–as well as from current events--and juxtaposes them in shattering visual images. Many passages have been widely quoted. The shortest of these is, “In Chen’s hands this recycling of images is not an imitation or a theft but a stroke of cunning.”

In June, 1980, Chen reestablished residence in New York City in the SoHo area, a move which proved to be a right one for the development of his career. He says, “With a mixture of Asian, European, and American influences, I grew up very conscious of being a ‘World Citizen’ . . . This kind of conscious awakening in the individual paves a way for a Global Culture based on Love, Peace, and Tolerance for all.”

Working from a New York base, Chen created several thematic series of paintings. The first of these was Liberty, a 100-painting commemoration of the centennial of the Statue of Liberty, followed by a 100-painting series on the centennial of the birth of Vincent van Gogh, and other “Centennial Productions.” He held hundreds of one-man shows, and lectured worldwide about his art and philosophy.

In SoHo Chen and his wife Lucia opened the non-profit T. F. Chen Cultural Center to promote a “Global New Renaissance in Love” and East-West cultural exchange. At this time Chen completed one of the most monumental outpourings in post-modern art, Towards the 21st Century, Symphony in World Culture, a seven panels of acrylic on canvas with a total measurement of 9'2" high by 46'8" long and a powerful amalgamation of dozens of the icons that mark his art.

For this Chen was honored as the first artist-painter to receive the Global Tolerance Award from the Friends of the United Nations, who named him a Cultural Ambassador for Tolerance and Peace.

Chen has had more than 200 one-man exhibitions, has published more than 20 books, and has seen his art portrayed in more than 300 textbooks, art histories, and learned journals. Some critics consider him among the 20 most important artists working today. Others place him in the top ten.   Market Appraisal   Now to the crux of this appraisal. In monetary terms, how much is Chen’s art worth? How much will it be worth in the future, near term and long term?

Although there are uncertainties, the answers to these questions are not based upon speculation, but upon market facts and evidence.

Year after year intelligent investment in art usually has proved to be a sound investment. Sometimes profits are spectacular. Art investment tends to be recession resistant, though not recession proof–nothing is–and can outpace inflation.

Back in the 1970s in support for my business selling old masters and in the development and financing of AcroEditions, my own enterprise for publishing fine, limited-edition original prints, I compiled a summary of the many reports, tapes, studies, investigations, and voluminous other information in my archives to describe and define the art market. The result, a 22-page Art Market Analysis. Although much of what I found remains valid today, some of that data is severely outdated. For instance, at the time it was very difficult to find any work of art that sold at public auction for more than one million dollars. It was rumored that the National Gallery in Washington had paid $5 million to the Duke of Lichtenstein for Leonardo da Vinci’s Ginevera da Benci, which became the only da Vinci painting in the Western Hemisphere. The rumored price set the artworld on its ear–but today that painting on the open market would bring at least 20 times that much..

Two weeks ago Christie’s, New York, held an auction of Impressionist and modern art. In a three-hour frenzy $491.4 million, nearly half a billion dollars, worth of art changed hands. (The total would have gone way above that record-breaking mark if an important Picasso painting had not been withdrawn from the sale at the last minute because of an ownership dispute.)

  The star of the auction was a portrait by Gustav Klimt (1862-1918) which attracted four tenacious telephone bidders. After two dropped out, another entered the fray, and the final cost was $87.9 million, a record at public auction for the artist. (But it was not the record in private sale: a few days before Ronald S. Lauder had paid $135 for another Klimt in a private transaction).

A Gauguin fetched $40.3 million, a record for the artist, and other paintings brought unexpected high prices.

In another private sale a different collector scooped the world by buying a 1952 Willem de Kooning, (1904-1997) painting for roughly $137.5 million. The seller had recently parted with a Jackson Pollock (1912-1956) for $140 million and a Jasper Johns (1930- ) for $80 million. Note that Johns is a contemporary of Chen, which is suggestive.

Chen has done a lot of work making multiple original, limited-edition prints using various processes. An Andy Warhol print recently sold for $17.4 million, an unbelievable sum.

Within this art market there is an exceptional opportunity for a collector/investor who has the vision to take a major position in the acquisition and promotion of Chen’s paintings.

  Market Management   There is an almost absolute correlation between the market price of a painting and the degree the artist is recognized. In spite of vagueries of fad, recognition usually comes to those artists who have talent and whose careers are carefully managed through a continuity of exhibitions, select exposure, significant sales, and published materials. This process is extremely important, in fact indispensable.

Once an artist begins to achieve this recognition his values usually have no alternative but to go up, for a creative artist is not a mass producer and can create only so many paintings in his lifetime. Recognition brings an ever-widening circle of collectors, museums, and other institutions who covet the limited quantity of his work. This causes the inexorable price pressures.

“Stocks may be split,” says a New York dealer, “but there are only so many Cezannes.”

  And despite his productivity there will be only so many Chens.

Sometimes the recognitions comes fast, and sometimes it comes very slowly. Artists can be promoted, thereby vastly enhancing the value of the works by that artist which might be in a collector’s portfolio. Among investors who have been the most spectacularly successful in the art market are those who were fortunate enough to secure either very important works by an art or large blocks of the painter’s work while they are still undervalued and then carefully managed this block of art in such a way as to fuel a price spiral.

How this has been done is nicely illustrated by the case of Jacques Villon, as cited by British art writers John Russell Taylor and Brian Brooks in The Art Dealers. Villon spent nearly 50 years working in relative obscurity, not quite at the center of any school or movement, until in 1942 he was put under contract by Louis Carré. By 1951, as ‘sold’ by Carré, he had got to the status of a retrospective at the Musée de l’Art Moderne (Paris) and had become one of the established masters. He had not changed, his work had not changed (beyond a certain amount of natural development, and the promotion was deserved. But it would never have been achieved–or not at least until some years after this death–if a dealer had not taken things in hand, planned ahead (selling virtually nothing for several years but seeing to it that Villon was well represented in various national and international exhibitions and building up the critical attention paid to him) and generally arranged the presentation of a coherent Villon image to many for whom, previously, Villon had been hardly ore than a name.

  Dr. Chen and his art have been intelligently promoted. As documented in catalogs, books, and clippings, as well as on television and radio, he has achieved significant world recognition. Even in the early days of his study in Paris he was enjoying one-man and group shows in Europe and at home and was writing regularly for Taiwanese art journals. This pursuit of recognition has never slackened, and his wife Lucia has been his imaginative and indefatigable champion, the engine that makes things work, along with his children.

Thirty years ago, at the beginning of Chen’s plunge into Neo-Iconography a dealer might have acquired one of his large paintings for $1500. By the time he settled in New York this was closer to $25,000. Now that painting would be one hundred times the original amount, at least $150,000, and I am convinced that price will continue to appreciate significantly. I look for the best of these paintings to break the million dollar barrier–and in the long term, who knows how high they can go?

The best-known Chinese expatriate painter in Paris was Zao Wou-ki, a near contemporary of Chen. He belonged to a school of painters that the French called Tachistes, a word for spot; the American counterparts were called action painters. His work often took inspiration from Chinese calligraphy. In recent Hong Kong auction houses, his 1959 oil topped a Sotheby’s sale at $733,604, and an abstract triptych from 1985 hit $2.3 million at Christies. (These are US dollars.)

China’s home-grown modernist artists, Ai Weiwei, Xu Bing, Yang Fudong, and expatriot Cai GuoQiang have been well above the half-a-million-dollar mark.

These are Chen’s current market prices (2005-6) for paintings on canvas;

  66 x 96" $250,000 to $350,000 50 x 72" $150,000 to $170,000 36 x 48" $ 75,000 to $ 80,000 30 x 40" $ 50,000 to $ 65,000 24 x 36" $ 30,000 to $ 35,000     This table is based upon the French system for new paintings by which all works of the same dimension carry the same gallery price. In the real world, especially in the after market, certain especially well-regarded works will command premium amounts. I expect these prices to increase. It might be possible for a serious collector/investor/promoter/syndicate to negotiate with the Chens for the purchase a substantial number of past and/or future paintings for an accommodating price, if that individual or group were committed to underwrite a substantial, long-term promotional campaign. The significant profit will come not from how low the purchasers can negotiate the original acquisition price but how high they can stimulate and ride the market for this art.

  I will not be so presumptuous to suggest what the terms of this negotiation should be, but for the sake of illustration, let us assume that I am the purchaser and have acquired 100 Neo-Iconography paintings. My financial objective would be to see those paintings eventually average a million dollars per picture. This won’t happen overnight, but I am looking for a long-term appreciation. Perhaps the greatest benefit will accrue to my children. Or to the institution to which I bequeath my art.

  If I had that money invested in the paintings, here are some of the steps I’d undertake:
  1. I would take over the world-wide management/sponsorship of Chen’s great project, Art for Humanity and the exhibition his monumental Toward the 21st Century: Symphony of World Culture, and I would not stop until its images made it the most famous picture in the world. I would write the catalogs for this collection.
  2. I would organize more specific exhibitions of Chen’s series paintings, e.g. The Liberty Collection, the Van Gogh Collection, etc. and I would promote their worldwide showings in as many museums, cultural centers, as other venues as possible. And I’d write the catalogs for these shows.
  3. If I shared reproduction rights, I’d make and merchandise limited-edition prints of the paintings.
  4. I would consider and evaluate all other promotional options. They must preserve Chen’s time--personal involvement limited to the most important occasions.
If the patron/collector/investor/syndicate wishes to see the investment’s value multiply, he must take an active interest in it. He must promote. Many promotion costs can be recouped. Books and catalogs are sold at exhibitions and through bookstores. Many promotional costs will be paid for by third parties, particularly museums and other exhibitors who pay hanging fees for showing the exhibitions.

Whatever the arrangements, they must be fair and beneficial to Chen and the purchaser.

For Chen there is more than money: there is the opportunity to be more productive and creative, further assuring his immortal enshrinement in the Pantheon of time.

For the purchaser there is the opportunity to realize substantial profit–and to enjoy a great deal of pleasure from encouraging the arts.   For the public–ultimately it will be the people who benefit most--many of these paintings will find their way into museums and other public collections to inspire viewers and provoke thought.

As an international appraiser and consultant in art investment, I recognized Chen’s genius years ago. My early judgment has been fully justified, and I have no hesitancy in continuing to place my reputation and advocacy behind him and his work.

  Lawrence S. Jeppson 29 November 2006   66 x 96" $250,000 to $350,000

50 x 72" $150,000 to $170,000

36 x 48" $ 75,000 to $ 80,000

30 x 40" $ 50,000 to $ 65,000

24 x 36" $ 30,000 to $ 35,000

Re mark: as now 2013 TF Chen Art Market price as following

These are Chen’s current market prices (2013) for paintings on canvas:

  66 x 96": ------------$700,000-$800,000

50 x 72": ________ $600,000-$700,000

36 x 48 ________ $500,000-$600,000

30 x 40": $450,000 -$500,000

24 x 36": _______ $300,000-$400,000

 
2015 年 10 月 21 日

Encountering Dr. Tsing-Fang Chen

By Lawrence Jeppson

Lawrence Jeppson is an art consultant, organizer and curator of art exhibitions, writer, editor and publisher, lecturer, art historian, and appraiser., He is expert on the works of several painters, including, Tsing-fang Chen, about whom he has written several books. Through the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service, the American Federation of Arts, New York’s Museum of Modern Art, and his own Art Circuit Services he has been a contributor to more than 200 art exhibitions in the United States, Canada, Japan. He owns AcroEditions, which publishes multiple-original art, and was co-founder and artistic director of Collectors’ Investment Fund.

As an international art critic, consultant, and market appraiser, I have placed my reputation and advocacy fully behind Dr. T.F. Chen for more than thirty years.

I first met Dr. T.F. Chen in 1975 at an exciting turning point in both our lives. Chen had just spent a dozen years in Paris obtained a Ph.D.(1970) from the Sorbonne and had just created a new art style (1970) that reconciled the many and often contradicting paths of Oriental and Western art. I was an organizer of traveling art exhibitions, friend of many French and American artists, writer, lecturer, and scholar/curator/expert on certain artists and forms of art.

Chen has been his momentous, creative melding of those technical and philosophical differences between Western and Eastern art. He was doing this by carefully taking images from these disparate cultures and marrying them with paint on canvas. The images were quotes, but the way he reconstructed and juxtaposed them and the way he manipulated brush and pigment were all his own. I immediately recognized his great talent, bursting on so many levels. Chen came on the New York scene shortly after Pop Art had blossomed and taken root as one of the new American gallery dramas. The classification of Chen as Pop falls farthest from the tree when comparison is made to Andy Warhol or Jasper Johns,. For all his posturing with Marilyn Monroe and Campbell's soup cans, Warhol was a thin, self-promoted talent. If Chen is considered along with Pop-ulist Robert Rauschenberg, there is some justification, since both use complex manipulation of many images.

However, instead of calling Chen a Pop artist, I prefer to call Chen a Neo-Iconographer, a style unto himself.

I began writing my first book about the artist, The Neo-Iconography of Tsing-fang Chen , to elucidate Chen's concept of a new renaissance drawing together Eastern and Western art into a shared common visual language. An oft-cited quote: "In Chen's hands this recycling of images is not an imitation or a theft but a stroke of cunning."

Chen is an illustrious painter who thinks and a profound thinker who paints. His visionary brush opens canals between huge and forbidding cultural oceans and digs deep into the telltales of time. Dr. Chen was born in Taiwan in 1936, when the island was part of the Japanese empire, and Taiwan was a cultural desert. Chen recalls, "I remember as a young boy memorizing every worn page of the 50 art books that a local dentist had smuggled in from Japan. At 14 years old, upon seeing the art of Vincent van Gogh for the first time, I wept and set my will upon going to Paris and becoming an artist. I consumed everything relating to fine art, literature, or music in that impoverished time and fed my soul with their beauty . . . Immersing myself in even the little bit of art that was available at that time made me into a passionate, intelligent, creative man with a great love and keen sensibility towards our humanity."

Dr. Chen graduated in 1950 from the National Taiwan University, where he was president of the Association of Fine Arts. Realizing his dreams, he went to Paris in 1963 on a coveted fellowship from the French government. He spent the next 12 years studying, painting, and exhibiting in France. He obtained a master's degree in French contemporary literature and a doctorate, summa cum laude, in art history from the Sorbonne. During this deeply intellectual period, he simultaneously studied at the Ecole Nationale Superieure des Beaux Arts.

In 1975 Chen and his wife Lucia moved from Paris to NYC and became a United States Citizen. In1983 and 1984 Chen moved to the SoHo art district of New York City. He says, "With a mixture of Asian, European, and American influences, I grew up very conscious of being a 'World Citizen' . . . This kind of conscious awakening in the individual paves a way for a Global Culture based on Love, Peace, and Tolerance for all."

Dr. Chen has a vision of world civilization arriving at a harmony of peace and understanding, but he also sees a world beset with problems that first must be overcome. He seeks to harmonize Western logic and science with Eastern intuition and simplicity. In doing so his images emerge as a rapturous, turbulent integration of the visuals of Formosan folklore, Chinese culture, Oriental art, and at least five centuries of unrolling, often conflicting Western traditions.

Dr. Chen has created such a large, varied, and powerful body of art that he can stand alone as one of the most significant painters in the world today, which he is. He has created several thematic series of paintings, such as The Spirit of Liberty in 1986, a 100-painting commemoration of the centennial of the Statue of Liberty; then in 1991, Chen's Post – Van Gogh Series, another 100-painting series, whose exhibition in Holland brought Chen enthusiastic raves. The ex-Minister of Culture in Holland, who is a notable Van Gogh expert, called Chen "the reborn Van Gogh."

Chen's homeland of Taiwan has also recognized him as a national treasure and arranged for his artwork to tour noted Taiwanese museums and cultural centers from 1984-2003. In 1990 the Taiwan Museum of Art acknowledged Chen's growing importance on the international art scene by giving him a monumental show: "The Art of Dr. T.F. Chen: Neo-iconography."

Chen established a unique cultural view, "Five-Dimensional World Culture" -- an "Art for Humanity's Sake," to recognize and encourage our new global village, concepts which can best be realized artistically through the encompassing arms of Neo-Iconography. This style inspired him to paint many series of paintings, not only The Spirit of Liberty and Post Van Gogh, but also East-West, Venus, Card players, Napoleon, Princess Diana, Jade Mountain, 9/11, and Las Vegas.

In 1996, Chen and his wife Lucia opened the non-profit T. F. Chen Cultural Center in SoHo , NYC to promote a "Global New Renaissance in Love" and East-West cultural exchange. At this time Chen completed one of the most monumental outpourings in post-modern art, Towards the 21st Century, Symphony in World Culture, on seven huge panels of acrylic on canvas with a total measurement of 9'2" high by 46'8" long -- a powerful amalgamation of dozens of cultural and historical icons that marked our century.

Chen is also frequently invited to speak and exhibit at many international conferences, such as the prestigious State of the World Forum in 1998 and 2000. In 2001, the Friends of the United Nations honored Chen as the first artist-painter to receive the Global Tolerance Award, and designated him a Cultural Ambassador for Tolerance and Peace. At the Awards event, Dr. Noel Brown, President of the FOUN, said, "In taking this decision to honor you, the Board was impressed by your art and multiculturalism and a lifetime or work dedicated to peace, tolerance and love and for creating a body of work expressing a shared vision of humanity."

Subsequently, the Chens established the T.F. Chen Art for Humanity Foundation to advance art education and a global culture of peace, as well as launch a five-year "Art For Humanity World Tour" of Chen's most powerful artworks, accompanied with cultural events and educational programs focusing on peace, tolerance, and cultural harmony.

Chen has been the recipient of more than 200 one-man exhibitions, has published more than 20 books in English, Chinese, and French; and has had his artwork featured in more than 300 textbooks, art histories, and learned journals. Some critics consider him among the 20 most important artists working today. Others place him in the top ten. This is not too much praise.

As an international art investment consultant, and appraisal I would like to write about my view on his market appraisal:

Year after year intelligent investment in art usually has proved to be a sound investment. Sometimes profits are spectacular. Art investment tends to be recession resistant and can outpace inflation.

Chen has done a lot of work making multiple original, limited-edition prints using various processes. An Andy Warhol print recently sold for $17.4 million, an unbelievable sum. (In May, 1986 New York Magazine featured Warhol, Robert Rauschenberg, and Dr. T.F. Chen's painting, Sunday Morning Liberty.) only Chen’s art price not in the range of 30 millions but under the 500,000. To me Chen as great as they are, in fact Chen has the highest art degree and east and west culture…. I expect chen’s prices to increase dramatically over the next few years, especially with the focus on Chen's ongoing Art for Humanity World Tour.

Within this art market there is an exceptional opportunity for a collector/investor who has the vision to take a major position in the acquisition and promotion of Chen's paintings.

Market Management

A creative artist is not a mass producer and can create only so many paintings in his lifetime. "Stocks may be split," says a New York dealer, "but there are only so many Cezannes." In the same vein, there will be only so many Chens. paintings in his lifetime. "Stocks may be split," says a New York dealer, "but there are only so many Cezannes." In the same vein, there will be only so many Chens.

If I had that money invested in chen’s 100 paintings, here are some of the steps I’d undertake . I would be to see each of those paintings eventually average $1 million dollars per picture.

  1. Form art professional teams to cooperate with the T.F. Chen Cultural Center to support the “Arts for Humanity World Tour.” While cooperating with other agencies, they would strive to make its images the most famous modern paintings in the world.
  1. Support more specific exhibitions of Chen’s series paintings, e.g. The Spirit of Liberty Collection, the Van Gogh Collection, etc. and promote their worldwide showings in as many museums, cultural centers, galleries, and other venues as possible.
  1. Publish and merchandise limited-edition prints; publish the art in film, educational TV, etc.
  1. Work closely with international critics, curators, auction houses, museums, and media, and in all kinds of reciprocal promotions.
Consider and evaluate all other promotional options. They must preserve Chen’s time -- so that he may be allowed to continue to create.

For collectors there is the opportunity to realize substantial profit -– and to enjoy social status and business opportunities from being significant contributors to the world art scene and human culture. Closely associated with the artist, purchasers, too, will become an important part of art history.

I have placed my reputation, advocacy, and assistance fully behind Dr. Chen. I recommend that you purchase his paintings now for three sound reasons.

  1. For esthetic pleasure
  2. For sound investment
  3. For better understanding of East-West culture
Esthetic pleasure is a very personal thing, and some of you may find a few of his paintings too strong for your tastes; and yet it is this very strength that makes the world art community pay attention. This strength, this power, will be the foundation of his reputation.

  As for investment, I believe there is a strong probability for future profit in any purchase of Chen’s paintings. As an artist becomes more widely recognized, his prices usually jump.

  In this era when every nation is searching for the spiritual inspiration from all corners of the world, it’s the creation and promotion of fascinating and uplifting art that highlights the dedication of better cultural understanding between the West and the East. As an international exhibition curator, appraiser, art writer, and consultant in art investment for nearly half a century, I recognized Chen’s genius decades ago. My early judgment has been fully justified, and I have no hesitancy in continuing to place my reputation and advocacy behind him and his work.

  Lawrence S. Jeppson

December 2007