CHEN Chi-kwan


Taiwanese 1921 - 2007


Born in 1921 in Beijing. In 1949, he graduated from Illinois State University School of Architecture in the United States. In 1952, he held his first exhibition at the Museum of Art of the MIT. In 1959, the British art critic Michael Sullivan called him "The Most Creative Chinese Painter". In 1963, the Tung Hai University Luce Chapel he designed which was completed and considered of great significance by the international architectural world. Chen Chi-kwan is one of the few examples of artists who successfully brought in Western influence to enrich Oriental art. Using his special training in Western style watercolor and graphic design, he blended Chinese traditional calligraphy and brush painting to provide Chinese Painting with an entirely new appearance. Among his works, those that resulted form his "multi-viewpoint" played up the importance of space time duality, continuing the space time tradition of Chinese Landscape painting tradition down from the Han and Tang dynasties.


CHEN Chi-kwan Artworks
Morning Mist
1986
Ink and color on paper (hanging scroll)
34 x 43 cm
Estimate
360,000 - 550,000
93,000 - 141,000
11,900 - 18,200
Sold Price
360,000
93,264
11,960
Family
1970
Ink on paper
28 x 33 cm
Estimate
200,000 - 300,000
49,000 - 74,000
6,400 - 9,500
Sold Price
432,000
104,854
13,504
My Mother Comforts Me
1953
Ink on paper
17 x 22.5 cm (upper)
61.5 x 24.5 cm (lower)
Estimate
360,000 - 550,000
92,000 - 140,000
11,800 - 18,100
Sold Price
360,000
89,552
11,564
Storm
1950 - 1959
Mixed media on paper
60 x 25.5 cm
Estimate
160,000 - 260,000
39,000 - 63,000
5,300 - 8,700
Sold Price
288,000
73,657
9,496
Transparency
1997
Print E/A
31 x 62 cm
Estimate
50,000 - 80,000
1,500 - 2,300
Sold Price
51,750
1,533
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