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LOTS 1610-1611PROPERTY OF A PRIVATE AUSTRALIAN COLLECTORThese two paintings were acquired by the present owner's father directly from the artist in Shanghai between 1949 and 1960 and thence by descent. Both parents of the owner took painting lessons from Lin Fengmian until early 1960s and they knew the artist very well.
WONG HAU KWEI (HUANG XIAOKUI, B. 1946)
Congestion Night
Details
WONG HAU KWEI (HUANG XIAOKUI, B. 1946)
Congestion Night
A set of two scrolls, mounted and framed
Ink and colour on paper
Each scroll measures 137 x 33 cm. (54 x 13 in.)
Executed in 2013 (2)
Congestion Night
A set of two scrolls, mounted and framed
Ink and colour on paper
Each scroll measures 137 x 33 cm. (54 x 13 in.)
Executed in 2013 (2)
Exhibited
Hong Kong, Singing Waves Gallery, City University of Hong Kong, Scenery of Hong Kong, Love in Hong Kong, 7 June-20 July 2014.
Hong Kong, Cultural Centre Exhibition Gallery, Observing in Silence - Wong Hau Kwei, 25-31 October, 2013.
Hong Kong, Contemporary by Angela Li, Observing in Silence - Wong Hau Kwei, 12 September-15 October, 2013.
Hong Kong, Cultural Centre Exhibition Gallery, Observing in Silence - Wong Hau Kwei, 25-31 October, 2013.
Hong Kong, Contemporary by Angela Li, Observing in Silence - Wong Hau Kwei, 12 September-15 October, 2013.
Further details
WONG HAU KWEI (B. 1946)
Selected exhibitions
2012 Hong Kong Central Library, Hong Kong, China (solo)
2010 Shanghai Art Museum, China (group)
2009 Hong Kong Museum of Art, Hong Kong (group)
National Dr. Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall, Taipei, Taiwan (group)
2008 Shenzhen Museum of Art, China (group)
2005 University Museum & Art Gallery, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong (group)
2002 University of London, U.K. (group)
1997 The National Art Museum of China, Beijing, China (solo)
Notable collections
National Art Museum of China, Beijing, China
Hong Kong Museum of Art, Hong Kong, China
Shenzhen Art Institute, Shenzhen, China
Guan Shanyue Art Museum, Shenzhen, China
Chinese Painting Society, Beijing, China
Wong Hau Kwei, born in Chongqing in 1946, settled in Hong Kong in 1978. He graduated from Donghua University and became a businessman in the textile industry. With the economy flourishing in the 1990s, he decided to change course and became a self-taught artist. Wong learned to paint from Huang Zhou and has spent almost a decade painting landscapes. His conceptualized pieces have won numerous awards and were shown in the Hong Kong Art Biennale in 1998, 2001, 2003 and 2005. Wong began his artistic career with a unique style of "bimo"- the technique of brush-and-ink. It is distinguishable from other traditional painting schools because of his condensed line strokes. His meticulous draftsmanship acts as though the entire painting is sewn on. He paints landscape with definite tonality that is metaphorically interwoven with subtle reminders of his past, almost like a textile needle worker. Wong often juxtaposes nature with the appearances of modern architecture or the presence of society to create equilibrium between the two polarities.
Selected exhibitions
2012 Hong Kong Central Library, Hong Kong, China (solo)
2010 Shanghai Art Museum, China (group)
2009 Hong Kong Museum of Art, Hong Kong (group)
National Dr. Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall, Taipei, Taiwan (group)
2008 Shenzhen Museum of Art, China (group)
2005 University Museum & Art Gallery, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong (group)
2002 University of London, U.K. (group)
1997 The National Art Museum of China, Beijing, China (solo)
Notable collections
National Art Museum of China, Beijing, China
Hong Kong Museum of Art, Hong Kong, China
Shenzhen Art Institute, Shenzhen, China
Guan Shanyue Art Museum, Shenzhen, China
Chinese Painting Society, Beijing, China
Wong Hau Kwei, born in Chongqing in 1946, settled in Hong Kong in 1978. He graduated from Donghua University and became a businessman in the textile industry. With the economy flourishing in the 1990s, he decided to change course and became a self-taught artist. Wong learned to paint from Huang Zhou and has spent almost a decade painting landscapes. His conceptualized pieces have won numerous awards and were shown in the Hong Kong Art Biennale in 1998, 2001, 2003 and 2005. Wong began his artistic career with a unique style of "bimo"- the technique of brush-and-ink. It is distinguishable from other traditional painting schools because of his condensed line strokes. His meticulous draftsmanship acts as though the entire painting is sewn on. He paints landscape with definite tonality that is metaphorically interwoven with subtle reminders of his past, almost like a textile needle worker. Wong often juxtaposes nature with the appearances of modern architecture or the presence of society to create equilibrium between the two polarities.
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