Lot 42
Can I Give You a Kiss?
Walasse TING (Chinese-American, 1929 - 2010)
1977
Acrylic and oil on canvas
76.5 x 102 cm
Estimate
TWD 1,300,000-1,800,000
USD 41,900-58,100
Sold Price
TWD 2,360,000
USD 76,252
Signature
Exhibited:
Love, Oil Painting Exhibition, Nan Galley, Taipei, May 9 - May 24, 1992
Illustrated:
Love, Oil Painting Exhibition, Nan Galley, Taipei, 1992, color illustration, cover and p. 17
Artist Magazine, Artist Publishing, Taipei,July 1983, no. 98, color illustration, cover page
This lot was ever reproduced as a poster
+ OVERVIEW
Walasse Ting is one of the most internationally eminent overseas Chinese artist. About a decade ago, someone from the art world once said, "Very few Chinese artists have influence internationally in painting. In Paris, there is Zao Wou-ki, in Cuba, Wifredo Lam and in New York, Walasse Ting. Their works have been collected by big museums around the world and adored by private collectors."(From Huang Yu-ling, "When a Sentimental Person Meets Another" Taiwan School, Taipei, Sept. 1993, p. 15)
Top-notch modern museums and art institutes such as: Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Metropolitan Museum of Art also in New York, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Chicago Art Institute, Detroit Institute of Art, Museum of Fine Art in Boston, Tate Gallery in London, Musee Cernuschi of Paris, Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Shanghai Museum of Art and Hong Kong Museum of Art all collect works by Walasse Ting.
Hailing from Wuxi, Jiangsu, Ting grew up in Shanghai. He once lived in Hong Kong, Paris, New York and Amsterdam. Of all the places, Ting forged the closest relationship with New York, where he spent about a decade. He befriended various modern abstract painters and pop artists and became an active member of the American art circle. New York's bright neon lights enriched the colors of his paintings while the liberal social backdrop inspired his imagination. Women, flowers, birds, animals and many elements in his daily life all melded into his work.
In 1977, the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation offered a grant to Ting to publish an art book, Red Mouth, which collected a series of erotic sketches and paintings. The artist admitted to be a great admirer of women and went by the self-styled nickname "Butterfly Gangster."He also wrote romantic poetry, depicting sensuous and exquisite women in love. When Ting finished "Can I Give You a Kiss"in the same year, a rare work on canvass, he continued the fluent abstractionism present in his earlier works, and at the same time, began the "titillating"works on paper of his latter years. After 1970s, Ting's unique style gradually appeared, with outlining strokes from Chinese calligraphy and vibrant acrylic colors filling into solids, which may be more familiar to viewers in his later works.
The image of "Can I Give You a Kiss?"can be widely seen in Taiwanese magazines, art journals and posters during two decades, rendering it one of the representative oil paintings from the 1970s. Author Huang Yu-ling once wrote a critique regarding this beautiful painting,"The girl bearing a flower basket symbolizes love; the blossoming flowers and vivid spots extend the abstract expressionism of his early works. The fluid yet simple lines accurately captures a woman's elegance. An artist who loves women and self-named 'Butterfly Gangster'excelled in depicting the charisma of women in love. This is a representative work from the 1970s. Its posters were once partially distributed by Nan Gallery." (Quoted from Love, Oil Painting Exhibition: Passion Art in Paintings Exhibition, Nan Gallery, Taipei, 1992, p.17)
The 20th Century Chinese Art
Ravenel Spring Auction 2005
Sunday, June 5, 2005, 12:00am