Put Down Your Whip is a 1939 oil painting by Chinese Realism painter Xu Beihong. Completed during Xu's stay in Singapore, the painting was exhibited numerous times before its disappearance from public view in 1954. It re-emerged in 2007 and was sold for HK$72 million (US$9.2 million) in an auction on 7 April, 2007 in Hong Kong, setting a record for the highest price ever paid for a Chinese painting at an auction.
History
Creation
In October
1939, during his stay in
Singapore,
Xu Beihong was inspired by a street drama performance titled
Put Down Your Whip by actress
Wang Ying, a friend of Xu's. Written by
Tian Han, the drama depicts a girl and her father who escaped from the Japanese-occupied northeastern
China and performed in the streets for a living. They sang about the hardship under the
Japanese Occupation and inspired their listeners to support the anti-Japanese war. Deeply moved by the drama, Xu spent ten days painting a life-size portrait of Wang with her audience in the background. He then titled the painting
Put Down Your Whip after the drama.
After Xu's death
The painting was exhibited on numerous occasions during Xu's life. However, it disappeared from public view in
1954, a year after Xu's death. According to Sotheby's Asia chairman Patti Wong, Xu gave the painting to a close friend named Huang Menggui. After Huang died, his descendants approached the
National Museum of Singapore in the hope that the museum could take the painting into its collection, but it did not happen for unspecified reasons. Huang's descendants then approached Singaporean collector
Tan Tsze Chor, but Tan died abruptly, before the deal was made. The painting eventually landed in the hands of an anonymous Asian collector, until being put up for auction in
2007.
Auction
Put Down Your Whip was sold on
7 April,
2007 in an auction in
Hong Kong by
Sotheby's for
HK$72 million (
US$9.2 million), setting a record for the highest price ever paid for a Chinese painting at an auction. The painting was bought by an anonymous collector over the telephone after competition from at least four other bidders.
Some art historians have criticised the recent explosion in the prices for Asian art, criticizing over-exuberant first-time Asian buyers for artificially sending prices sky-high. Sotheby's Asia chairman Patti Wong, however, said Xu's Put Down Your Whip would have sold well in any market.
References