MCLC: Jiang Qing photo fetches $64,000

Denton, Kirk denton.2 at osu.edu
Mon Dec 2 09:48:42 EST 2013


MCLC LIST
From: kirk (denton.2 at osu.edu)
Subject: Jiang Qing photo fetches $64,000
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Source: China Real Time Blog, WSJ (11/18/13):
http://blogs.wsj.com/chinarealtime/2013/11/18/photo-by-maos-wife-fetches-64
000/

Photo by Mao’s Wife Fetches $64,000 at Auction

This post originally appeared on Scene Asia <http://blogs.wsj.com/scene/>.

Just as China’s government wrapped up its Third Plenum session, a
photograph taken during another Communist Party meeting fetched a high
price on the auction market.

Taken more than half a century ago, a photograph by Jiang Qing, the last
wife of former Communist leader Mao Zedong, sold at a Beijing auction on
Saturday for 391,000 yuan (more than $64,180), almost 20 times its 20,000
yuan estimate.

The photograph, titled “Lushan Fairy Cave,” was captured in 1961 and the
black-and-white print depicts the mountain in the distance with branches
of the tree appearing in the foreground. A temple is visible at the top of
the mountain, which is surrounded by a clouds and contrasting light.

Lushan held a special significance for Mao. Located in Jiangxi province
along the Yangtze Rive, the town was one of his favorite summer vacation
spots. After ousting the nationalist Kuomintang party from power in 1949,
Mao took over a villa that had been occupied by his rival Chiang Kai-shek.

Lushan was the site of a major meeting for the Communist party leaders in
1959, during which Mao wrote the poem “Ascent of Lushan
<http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/mao/selected-works/poems/poems27
.htm>.” Two years later, party leaders congregated there again for a
meeting, when Jiang — sometimes known as Madame Mao — took her photograph.

According to the firm that sold the lot, Huachen Auctions, Jiang learned
photography from Shi Shaohua, a vice president of the Xinhua News Agency.
Her photograph of Lushan impressed Mao so much that he penned a poem for
her, nowadays often taught and read by Chinese students, which praises the
dramatic landscape.

The sale of the photo comes at a time when Mao is surging in popularity
and increasingly referred to in political chatter. Chinese President Xi
Jinping this year visited the Lushan villa that inspired the poems and
photo, saying that the building should become a center for educating youth
about patriotism and revolution.

Huachen said both the buyer and seller were private collectors, and
declined to give further information.

–Jason Chow. Follow him on Twitter @jjasonchow
<http://twitter.com/jjasonchow>




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