Visitors enjoy A Large Imperial Portrait of Consort Chunhui during the preview of Sotheby's autumn auction in Hong Kong, Oct 5, 2015. (Photo/Xinhua)
A Large Imperial Portrait of Consort Chunhui by court painter Giuseppe Castiglione from the Qianlong Period of Qing Dynasty was sold at $HK 137.4 million ($17.7 million), the highest auction record for a Chinese imperial tailoring portrait around the world.
The portrait, painted by Italian painter Giuseppe Castiglione and others, was auctioned at a Sotheby's autumn sale in Hong Kong on Oct 7.
As a rarely seen large-size portrait by Giuseppe Castiglione, it is also the only known portrait of Consort Chunhui in a court robe. It has title calligraphy by Emperor Qianlong, which may have been written after Chunhui's death, as a way for the emperor to make a tribute to the deceased imperial concubine.
The previous record for imperial tailoring portraits is the Half-length Portrait of Consort Chunhui by Castiglione, which was bought for HK$ 39.86 million ($5.14 million) in May of 2012 during a Bonhams sale in Hong Kong.
As a favored painter of Emperor Qianlong, Giuseppe Castiglione painted most of the portraits of the emperor and his concubines. But as almost all of Giuseppe Castiglione's paintings are collected in museums, they are rarely available on the market.
A Large Imperial Portrait of Consort Chunhui was sold during an auction at Sotheby's in Hong Kong, Oct 7, 2015. (Photo/Xinhua)