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New Christie's sale taps Asian quest for Western art
by Staff Writers
Hong Kong (AFP) Nov 23, 2016


Australia's Crown Resorts casino staff arrested in China
Sydney (AFP) Nov 23, 2016 - Three Australian employees of billionaire James Packer's Crown Resorts have been formally arrested in China, both countries said Wednesday, as Beijing cracks down on high-roller gambling promotions.

Eighteen Crown staff, including the three Australians, were held in raids in October on suspicion they were organising gambling activities overseas for Chinese nationals.

Gaming companies are not allowed explicitly to advertise gambling in China.

"We have been formally advised that three Australians have been arrested on suspicion of gambling-related offences," Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop told Sky News.

She said consular officers visited the trio on Tuesday and they were in good health and being represented by lawyers.

"There is... an overall anti-corruption agenda of (Chinese) President Xi Jinping and gambling is one of the areas of interest to them," she added.

"We are subject to the laws of China, we are subject to the laws of the country that we are visiting or we are operating in."

One of those being held is Jason O'Connor, the executive vice president of a Crown division called VIP International.

There was no immediate comment from Crown.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said the trio had been formally arrested on Friday on suspicion of gambling.

"China will handle this case in accordance with the law," he told reporters at a regular briefing.

Packer last month said he was "deeply concerned" for the detained employees.

Crown operates casinos across Australia and the world, including in Macau, where revenues have been hit hard by a Chinese corruption crackdown that has driven away many big-spenders.

Graft has become endemic in China and Xi launched a much-publicised anti-corruption drive after he came to power in 2012.

Auction house Christie's is holding its first ever sale of Western art masterpieces in Hong Kong this week in response to a surge in interest from wealthy Asian collectors.

The works by contemporary and classical artists including Willem de Kooning, Andy Warhol and Claude Monet are designed to appeal to an elite pool of buyers in the region who are increasingly making their presence felt on the global art scene.

Worth more than $250 million in total, the works will not go under the hammer, but will be available for private sale and on show to the public from Thursday as part of an exhibition called "The Loaded Brush".

In the past three to four years Asian collectors from across the region have "driven the art market at the highest level", said Brett Gorvy, chairman and international head of post-war and contemporary art at Christie's.

Although the sale includes some works at the lower end of the price range, its key pieces are all Western masterpieces aimed at Asia's big hitters.

"We wanted to respond to the type of collectors who are buying in our field -- $20, $30, $40 million dollars and above -- and in Asia there are at least between 25 and 30 collectors who are active at the moment in that area," Gorvy told AFP.

China's economic slowdown, a corruption crackdown by Beijing and global instability have affected art markets, but auctioneers have always remained optimistic that the highest quality pieces would find homes among the super rich.

Chinese tycoon Liu Yiqian proved the point in November 2015, when he bought Modigliani's "Nu Couche" in New York for a record $170.4 million.

Liu, who has a track record of major acquisitions of Chinese art, told AFP he also wants to exhibit Western works at his Long Museum in Shanghai in an interview earlier this year.

Those who started out years ago collecting Asian artworks are now increasingly interested and able to afford Western masterpieces with top-end price tags.

"Its a maturity of wealth as much as a maturity of taste," said Gorvy.

Wealthy collectors are also confident that quality artworks are retaining their value as assets, Gorvy added.

The region's top collectors come from countries, including China, Malaysia, Japan and Korea, he said, with abstract styles particularly popular.

The works for sale this week come from collectors in Europe and the United States.

"The Loaded Brush" also features major pieces on loan from prominent Asian collectors including paintings by Picasso and Van Gogh.


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