Chinese buyers shaking up art auction market

Committed Chinese buyers are shaking up the art auction market worldwide
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The hottest items at the moment are Chinese ceramics with investors from the mainland buying back what they see as their heritage.
The Mei Moses Traditional Chinese Art Index, which tracks prices in auction salerooms, increased by 225 percent in the three years to the end of 2010.
Mei Jianping, professor of finance at Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business in Beijing, and co-creator of a series of fine art indices with American academic Professor Michael Moses, says what we are seeing is a repeat of the 1980s when everybody anticipated what the Japanese were buying.
"At the moment there is a focus on Chinese art and people are buying it because there is an expectation the Chinese purchases will drive up the market."
One event that stunned the international art world came somewhat unceremoniously at Bainbridge's, a small auction house in Ruislip in northwest London.
A vase that was part of a deceased estate and had been insured for just 800 pounds (950 euros) sold to a Chinese buyer for 53.1 million pounds (63 million euros) in November.
The 1740 piece that had once been in a royal palace had somehow made a mysterious journey to London suburbia.
At the fall of the hammer the price of every Chinese art object held anywhere in the world probably needed to be revalued.
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Mei Jianping is professor of finance at Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business in Beijing. Zhang Wei / China Daily
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Professor Mei says there was an ever-present risk of record prices being fetched for such items.
"Whenever you get two billionaires in a room who want something there is always a possibility of things getting out of whack," he says.
"There are very few objects bought for more than $50 million (37 million euros), however. There have been some scrolls in Beijing and Hong Kong recently but many of these items are very rare in the market. In a sense it is hard to put a value on these objects."
Zhao Xu, executive director of Beijing Poly International Auction Co Ltd, the leading State-owned auction house, says he can only see the trend of Chinese people buying art, whether it be Chinese or Western, continuing.
"The emerging Chinese new rich are starting to establish their own set of collections and they need to buy more art pieces to enrich their collections," he says.
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