The painting, made with ink and gouache — a type of watermedia consisting of pigment, water, a binding agent (usually dextrin or gum arabic), and sometimes additional inert material — is 82cm x 66cm and was completed during the period of 1937-39.
It combined "Oriental" themes with "Occidental" forms, a specialty in Phổ’s works.
Lê Phổ (1907 - 2001) was a Vietnamese painter. In 1932, he earned a scholarship to study at École des Beaux-Arts (National School of Fine Arts) in Paris. After returning to the country, he taught at Việt Nam University of Fine Arts in Hà Nội.
Vietnamese treasure: Family Life by Lê Phổ sold at $1.2m at Sotheby’s Hong Kong. - File Photo
His favourite subjects are Việt Nam landscapes, still life with flowers, family settings and portraits. Vietnamese women — often portrayed as elongated, surrealistic figures — are a recurrent theme in his works.
As part of the university’s first generation, Phổ spent most of his time working in France. Each of his works are painstakingly well-preserved, stored and separated into seperated files. Thanks to that, his paintings are thriving on the world market. His works normally range from $10,000 to $50,000 per painting.
Before Family Life was sold, three other of the artist’s pieces sold at high prices this year.
The trio Nhìn Từ Đỉnh Đồi (A View From Top of The Hill, oil in canvas, 1937), sold at $844,697, Thiếu Nữ và Cành Na (Young Lady and the Sugar Apple branch, silk on canvas, 1938), sold at $567,178 at Hong Kong’s Christie’s; and Tình Mẫu Tử (Motherhood, silk canvas, 1940) sold at $629,276 at Hongkong’s Sotheby’s.
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