[CPProt.net] China: Where have Chen Yifei's studio paintings gone?
Museum Security Network / Cultural Property Protection Net (Ton Cremers)
museum-security at museum-security.org
Fri Apr 15 07:38:50 CEST 2005
Where have Chen Yifei's studio paintings gone?
By Hu Cong (China Daily)
Updated: 2005-04-15 06:07
SHANGHAI: The legacy of renowned Shanghai artist Chen Yifei is in trouble -
just four days after his death.
Artwork collectors swarm into Layefe Home located at Shanghai Oriental
Plaza, April 11, to purchase some works by the late oil painter and visual
artist Chen Yifei,who died Sunday from a gastric hemorrhage. Some speculate
that there may be a rise in price for Chen's works as he suddenly passed
away. [newsphoto]
Chen's wife, Song Meiying, reported yesterday morning that 13 porcelain
paintings from his pottery studio have been stolen, the Shanghai Public
Security Bureau revealed to reporters yesterday.
There are no accurate statistics on how much the lost works are worth, but
the value may be quite high considering Chen's past glories.
One of Chen's masterpiece paintings featuring scenery in East China was
auctioned in Hong Kong for HK$1.37 million (US$162,000) in 1991, then the
highest price under any auctioneer's gavel for a contemporary Chinese
painter's work.
Detectives are investigating the case and declined to provide further
details. But discussions about the case were running hot in the neighourhood
yesterday.
"I think it was done by someone inside... how can someone else take the
stuff out so easily?" said an old local man chatting with a crowd of
onlookers near the studio.
But he avoided speaking more directly about media reports that Chen's
families might be involved in disagreements over Chen's assets after his
sudden death. "The police will have to make a conclusion," he said.
Local media have been told Chen's eldest son, Chen Lin, would continue his
business. Chen also has another son, just 5, from his second wife Song
Meiying, a former model.
The pottery studio, located along a quiet side street off Shanghai's Taikang
Road, has been closed since Sunday, when Chen died of a stomach disorder -
at 59.
The black wooden gate of the warehouse-turned-studio remained barred
yesterday, but the holes and scratches on it indicate someone had pried it
open.
Two police officers sat stationed opposite the door guarding the site. Asked
when the studio would reopen, one officer said, "It's not likely (to
reopen)."
The pottery studio was opened in 1999, when local government planners' ideas
of developing the once factory-laden neighbourhood into an art street caught
Chen's heart.
Chen also started making movies in 1993. He was admitted to hospital with
gastro-enteritis last Wednesday while filming his new movie "The Barber."
The movie's investor and Chen's family announced Hong Kong director Ng
See-yuen, Chen's friend, will finish Chen's movie.
(China Daily 04/15/2005
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/
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