ZHU YUNMING (1460-1526), WANG DUO (1592-1652) AND OTHERS
ZHU YUNMING (1460-1526), WANG DUO (1592-1652) AND OTHERS
ZHU YUNMING (1460-1526), WANG DUO (1592-1652) AND OTHERS
9 More
ZHU YUNMING (1460-1526), WANG DUO (1592-1652) AND OTHERS
12 More
Selections from the Poon Family Collection (Lots 174-195)
ZHU YUNMING (1460-1526), WANG DUO (1592-1652) AND OTHERS

Album of Small Standard Script Calligraphy

Details
ZHU YUNMING (1460-1526), WANG DUO (1592-1652) AND OTHERS
Album of Small Standard Script Calligraphy
Album of eight fan leaves, ink on gold paper
Each measures approx. 16 x 46.5 cm. ( 6 ¼ x 18 3⁄8 in.)
One fan leaf signed and seven fan leaves inscribed and signed, with a total of nineteen seals of the artists
Twenty-one collector’s seals, including ten of Pan Zhengwei (1791-1850) and nine of Pan Baojun (19th C.)
One illegible seal
Colophon by Wu Rongguang (1773-1843), with two seals
Titleslip by Pan Baohuang (1853-1892), with two seals
Titleslip on the silk pouch, with one seal
Literature
Pan Zhengwei, Notes on Paintings and Calligraphy of Ting Fan Lou Vol. 4, in Fine Art Series Vol.1 Bk.20: Notes on Paintings and Calligraphy of Ting Fan Lou, World Bookstore, Taipei, May 1980, pp.289-304. (The 1st, 3rd, 4th, 6th, 9th and 11th fan leaf)
Pan Zhengwei, Notes on Paintings and Calligraphy of Ting Fan Lou Vol. 4, in Complete Compendium of Chinese Painting and Calligraphy, Vol. 11, Shanghai Painting and Calligraphy Publishing, April 1997, pp. 854-857. (The 1st, 3rd, 4th, 6th, 9th and 11th fan leaf)
Further details
A Treasure from Guangdong: Album of Small Standard Script Calligraphy from Ting Fan Lou

Pan Zhengwei (1791–1850), master of Ting Fan Lou, was the third-generation successor of the Poon family, proprietors of Tong Wen Hang, the leading merchant firm among the historic Thirteen Hongs of Canton. Pan was also a prominent scholar and gentry leader in Guangzhou during the Daoguang era of the Qing Dynasty. Due to its immense wealth and deep appreciation for art and culture, the Poon family was renowned as both an eminent literary household and a major force in foreign trade.
Pan Zhengwei received rigorous scholarly training from a young age, studying the calligraphy of Su Shi and Mi Fu, and excelling particularly in small regular script (xiaokai). He was a fubang gongsheng (a scholar who passed the provincial exam but did not advance to the national level) and was known for his passion for collecting calligraphy, paintings, and rubbings.
The Album of Small Standard Script Calligraphy consists of eight leaves, featuring works by eleven Ming calligraphers, including Zhu Yunming, Wen Zhengming, Wang Chong, Shao Mi, Xue Mingyi, the “Four Masters of the Ming” (Peng Nian, Zhou Tianqiu, Wen Jia, and Wen Peng), DongQichang, and Wang Duo. What makes this collection particularly remarkable is that all the fan leaves are written in extremely fine “fly-head” script (yingtou xiaokai). Since each calligrapher drew inspiration from different artistic traditions, the album displays a harmonious balance of elegance and strength.
Pan Zhengwei inscribed a small regular script colophon on each fan leaf to express his admiration for the album. On Zhu Yunming’s leaf, he wrote:“Among the sixteen fan-leaf calligraphy pieces in this album, Zhu Yunming’s work stands as the finest.”
Pan Zhengwei’s colophon reveals that the original album contained sixteen fan leaves, but only twelve were recorded in Volume Four of his Paintings and Calligraphy of Ting Fan Lou. The following leaves are believed to be lost:
Wu Pou’an’s small regular script (2nd leaf)
Wang Juesi’s Bronze Sparrow Terrace (5th leaf)
Wang Guxiang’s small regular script (7th leaf)
Kuang Zhanruo’s small regular script (8th leaf)
Wen Chengxiu’s small regular script (9th leaf)
Additionally, one leaf—originally attributed to Huang Daozhou in the Ting Fan Lou records (12th leaf)—was likely mistakenly catalogued, as the content and signature indicate it was actually written by Wang Duo. This suggests a cataloguing error in the historical records. Based on this information, the eight surviving pieces likely represent what remains of the original sixteen.
Pan Baotang (1853–1892), Pan Zhengwei’s grandson, inscribed on the titleslip of the album:
“An old treasure of Ting Fan Lou, repurchased by grandson Baotang and carefully preserved at Wangqiongxianguan.”
This suggests that during Pan Zhengwei’s lifetime, some of the artworks from the Ting Fan Lou collection may have been lost, possibly due to war and turmoil. However, his grandson Pan Baotang later reacquired and safeguarded some of these lost works to ensure their preservation within the Poon family lineage. This remarkable continuity makes the collection an invaluable treasure today.

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Lot Essay

Commerce, Culture, and Art Collecting – Selections from the Poon Family Collection

In the annals of Chinese history, few families have embodied the confluence of commerce, culture, and philanthropy with as much distinction and influence as the lineage of Poankeequa—the Poon family. Originally from Quanzhou, Fujian, this illustrious family made a pivotal move to Panyu, Guangdong, in 1776, during the 41st year of Emperor Qianlong’s reign. There, they became deeply embedded in the socio-economic fabric of the region, leaving an indelible mark on the cultural, educational, and philanthropic landscapes—not only within Canton but also in the broader context of Sino-Western exchange.
At the heart of this enduring legacy lies a distinguished lineage of literati, scholars, poets, artists, art collectors, policymakers, and Confucian merchants. Among them, Poankeequa, or Pan Zhencheng (1714–1788), emerged as a towering figure in the 18th-century Canton trade system. As one of the most formidable merchants within the Cohong—a guild authorized by the Qing Dynasty to conduct trade with Western nations—he played a crucial role in shaping China’s global commercial interactions. Central to this success was the family’s stewardship of Guangzhou Tong Wen Hang, the largest foreign trade firm of its time within the Thirteen Hongs of Canton. Under his leadership from 1760 to 1788, the firm flourished, a legacy that continued under his son, Poankeequa II (Pan Youdu, 1755–1820), during whose tenure the family business reached unprecedented prosperity.
By the 19th century, the family’s influence extended beyond commerce into the realm of cultural preservation. Pan Zhengwei (1791–1850), the third generation of the Poon family and master of Ting Fan Lou, epitomized this commitment. Ting Fan Lou—meaning “Listening to the Sails”—evokes the grandeur of the Hong merchants and the wealth their maritime trade brought. A dedicated collector and connoisseur of Chinese art, Pan Zhengwei amassed an extraordinary collection of classical paintings and calligraphy, engaging with a distinguished circle of literati, including Wu Rongguang (1773–1843), a politician and art connoisseur who inscribed colophons on many of Pan’s treasured pieces. Pan Zhengwei’s meticulous compilation of Paintings and Calligraphy of the Ting Fan Lou Collection, spanning five volumes, alongside the Ting Fan Lou Poetry Collection, stands as a testament to his dedication to preserving China’s artistic heritage.
Despite the dissolution of the Cohong system following the First Opium War, the Poon family’s intellectual and cultural legacy endured. Later generations pursued distinct yet complementary paths, championing knowledge, cultural preservation, and societal welfare.
By the early 20th century, as members of the Poon family settled in Hong Kong, their reverence for art and culture remained steadfast. Among them, Ronald Poon (1942- 2022), a distinguished architect trained at the prestigious Architectural Association in London, inherited part of the Ting Fan Lou collection and further expanded it. A devoted member of the Min Chiu Society, he played a pivotal role in organizing commemorative exhibitions in Hong Kong and abroad. In a gesture of humility and homage to his ancestors, he named his collection Xiao Ting Fan Lou—or The Canton Collection in English—honoring the generations who laid the foundation for his deep appreciation of traditional art and culture.
This season, Christie’s is honoured to present a selection of paintings and calligraphy from the Poon Family Collection, a testament to the art of collecting across centuries, preserved within a single lineage. This extraordinary selection features Album of Small Standard Script Calligraphy by Ming Dynasty calligraphers, Calligraphy on satin by Wang Duo, alongside exquisite fan leaves by masters such as Wen Zhengming, Wen Jia, Chen Chun, and Zhu Yunming.

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