Monday, August 24, 2015

MESHUGGGENNAAAAAAAA!!!

A mix between evil, crazy and many other things.

Shanghai-based art collector Liu Yiqian recently spent $36.3 million on a tiny porcelain cup with a humble chicken painted on its surface. But for many in China, the most shocking thing wasn’t the amount he paid, or the fact that he paid with an American Express card.

No, it was the fact that Mr. Liu decided to celebrate his Ming-dynasty purchase by sipping some tea from it.

The cup in question is one of China’s so-called “chicken cups,” which were forged in imperial kins and possess a particularly silky texture. Though fakes abound, only 19 genuine articles are known to exist. To art experts, they’re known as the “holy grail” of Chinese porcelains.
Mr. Liu celebrates his purchase.
Courtesy of Sothebys
Mr. Liu bought his in a heated Hong Kong Sotheby’s auction, in a bidding war that lasted seven minutes. Late last week, when he paid up—by swiping his American Express card an individual 24 times, according to Sotheby’s—he also decided to take a celebratory swig from the cup.

On Monday, Mr. Liu told China Real Time that he wasn’t trying to show off his wealth. “It happened when I was paying,” said Mr. Liu, who made his fortune in finance. “A Sotheby’s staffer poured me some tea. I saw the [chicken cup] and excitedly poured some of that tea into the cup and drank a little,” he said. “Such a simple thing—what’s so crazy about that?”

From over-the-top weddings to bouquets made out of dollar bills, the antics of China’s wealthy have stirred up considerable social resentment amid the country’s entrenched inequality in recent years. Thanks to its rapid industrialization, China is home to 152 billionaires, and many more have been catapulted into considerable wealth—one that’s helped power the rise of a buoyant art market that has seen record-breaking purchases like Mr. Liu’s.

However, it also remains a country where more than 175 million people live on less than $1.25 a day, according to the World Bank.

“Emperor Qianlong has used it, now I’ve used it,” said Mr. Liu of his chicken cup, referring to one of the Qing Dynasty’s most celebrated emperors. “I just wanted to see how it felt.” The cup, he added, “isn’t a commercial product appropriate for the masses.”

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Sweet friends - before we criticize him, let us look at the frum community. Aren't we also afflicted with the illness of spending excessive money in unnecessary luxuries while our brothers and sisters live in poverty??