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The Private Art Sale II

The Private Art Sale returns this October for its highly anticipated second edition — bigger, bolder, and featuring a fresh collection of exceptional artworks for collectors to explore and acquire.
Presented by Asia Art Collective and Visual Arts Centre, The Private Art Sale 2 showcases 90 curated works by 25 distinguished local and international artists, spanning oil paintings, Chinese ink on paper, sculptures, and mixed media creations.

Hosted at Artspace @ Helutrans, this three-day event invites collectors, buyers, and art enthusiasts to immerse themselves in a thoughtfully assembled exhibition, with all artworks available for viewing and collection.

We are proud to present a line-up of acclaimed artists in this upcoming edition — from Lim Tze Peng, Yeo Hoe Koon, and Ong Kim Seng, to many more esteemed local and international names. Each artist brings a distinctive voice and vision to this exclusive showcase, making The Private Art Sale 2 a must-visit for collectors and art enthusiasts alike.
Browse below to discover the full list of participating artists and the curated selection of artworks available for acquisition.

This artwork is featured in The Private Art Sale 2
31 October – 2 November 2025 | Artspace @ Helutrans
Presented by Asia Art Collective and Visual Arts Centre

Cheong Soo Pieng

[b. 1921 - 2025]

Born in Singapore in 1921, Lim Tze Peng (林⼦平) is one of Singapore’s most significant artists and the longest living and working artist who had passed on in 2025, at 103 years old. Lim is renowned for his Chinese ink creations of post-independence Singapore, and his signature modern Chinese calligraphy – 糊 涂字.
Lim has been bestowed several awards including the Special Prize at the Commonwealth Art Exhibition in England in 1977 and the prestigious Cultural Medallion in Singapore in 2003. In May 2012, he had broke the auction record for the highest price for a work by a Singaporean living artist with the artwork “Singapore River Scene” (1978) having sold at US$160,392 on hammer at a Christies auction sale in Hong Kong,
Alongside local and international exhibitions, his masterpieces are exhibited in prominent Singapore institutions and is part of many prestigious collections.

Lim Tze Peng

[b. 1921 - 2025]

Lim Tze Peng (b.1921) is Singapore’s most prominent living artist and Cultural Medallion recipient. Renowned for his iconic ink paintings of old Singapore and expressive calligraphy, his works are held in major collections including the Singapore Art Museum, affirming his legacy in modern Asian art.

Born in Singapore in 1921, Lim Tze Peng (林⼦平) is one of Singapore’s most significant artists and the longest living and working artist who had passed on in 2025, at 103 years old. Lim is renowned for his Chinese ink creations of post-independence Singapore, and his signature modern Chinese calligraphy – 糊 涂字.

Lim has been bestowed several awards including the Special Prize at the Commonwealth Art Exhibition in England in 1977 and the prestigious Cultural Medallion in Singapore in 2003. In May 2012, he had broke the auction record for the highest price for a work by a Singaporean living artist with the artwork “Singapore River Scene” (1978) having sold at US$160,392 on hammer at a Christies auction sale in Hong Kong,

Alongside local and international exhibitions, his masterpieces are exhibited in prominent Singapore institutions and is part of many prestigious collections.
Chen Wen Hsi

Chen Wen Hsi

[b. 1906-1991]

Chen Wen Hsi was a Chinese-born Singaporean painter known for his use of representational imagery as a catalyst for creating abstract shapes and colors.

Influenced by traditional Chinese paintings, the early Cubist works Pablo Picasso, and Paul Klee, Chen created his own vocabulary of forms and colors based in the observation of nature, animals, and man-made structures. Born on September 9, 1906 in Guangdong, China, he studied at the Xinhua Academy of Fine Arts in Shanghai before moving to Singapore in 1948 during the Chinese Civil War. The artist died on December 17, 1991 in Singapore.

Today, his works are in the collection of the Singapore Art Museum.

Yeo Hoe Koon

[b. 1935 - 2025]

Born in 1935 in Hainan, China, and later settling in Singapore, Yeo Hoe Koon is widely recognised as one of Singapore’s pioneering second generation artists. After graduating from the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts (NAFA), Yeo furthered his studies at the renowned École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris, where he immersed himself in the world of European modernism.

This journey between cultures has shaped Yeo’s unique artistic voice. His works reflect a refined blend of Eastern and Western influences, expressed with sensitivity, confidence, and a deep understanding of both traditions. Over the years, his work has been featured in major exhibitions both in Singapore and internationally, and he is respected as a master whose contributions have played an important role in shaping Singapore’s modern art landscape.

Henri Chen Ke Zhan

Henri Chen Ke Zhan

[b. 1959]

Born in Singapore in 1959, Henri Chen Ke Zhan is a renowned abstract expressionist artist who blends the elegance of traditional Chinese ink painting with the bold gestures of Western contemporary art. A dedicated student of prominent Lingnan masters Fan Chang Tien and Chao Shao An, Chen developed a unique style that harmonizes expressive brushwork with lyrical abstraction. Deeply influenced by music, his creative process often mirrors rhythmic flow, allowing his paintings to carry a sense of movement and emotional resonance.

liu_kang_exhibition_asia_art_collective

Liu Kang

[b. 1911-2004]

Liu Kang is recognised as one of Singapore’s most influential pioneering first-generation artists. He is best known for his contributions to the Nanyang painting style, which he developed together with his contemporaries after a field trip to Bali in 1952. Many arts scholars have identified the Bali trip as a milestone event contributing to the birth of the Nanyang art style, marking an important juncture in Singapore’s art history.

 

He had also greatly contributed to the development of art in Singapore. He was a leading figure in the Society of Chinese Artist and the Singapore Art Society, and received the Public Service Star award in 1970, and the Meritorious Service medal in 1996.

Fernando Botero

[b. 1932 - 2023]

Born in 1932 in Medellin, Colombia, Fernando Botero is an artistic living legend of our times. A prolific artist and creator of the signature style ‘Boterismo’, the artist’s rounded musings have made him a global figure in the contemporary art world, and the artistic ambassador of Colombian pursuit. Rounded from convention, distinctive in spite of the commonplace, and tied to Colombian history and heritage – his curvaceous forms have reached monumental heights and are collected by major museums, corporations and private collectors all over the world, including the United States, Korea, and Mexico City, to name a few.

Salvador Dali

[b. 1904-1989]

Born on May 11, 1904, in Figueres, Spain, Salvador Dalí’s eccentric nature and talent for self-promotion made him the most famous representative of the surrealist movement and one of the most widely recognised artists in the world. Identified as an artistic prodigy from a tender age, Dalí attended the drawing school at the Colegio de Hermanos Maristas and the Instituto in Figueres, Spain in 1916. In 1922, he enrolled in the Academia de San Fernando in Madrid and received recognition during his first solo show held in Barcelona in 1925. Dalí became internationally known after the third annual Carnegie International Exhibition in Pittsburgh in 1928 and grew to immense notoriety and fame. Today, his sculptures and paintings are exhibited in the most prestigious museums in the world and part of many coveted private and public collections.

Ling Cher Eng

[b. 1940-1995]

Born in 1940, Ling Cher Eng was a second-generation Singaporean artist. Ling studied Chinese painting under the pioneer artist Fan Chang Tien (1907-1987) from 1957, when he attended Chung Cheng High School. The literati tradition of the Shanghai School of painting as practised by Fan, which can be traced back to the Shanghai School masters Wang Geyi, Wang Yiting, Pan Tianshou and Zhu Wenyun deeply influenced Ling and resonated with his passion for ink painting.

Ling greatly admired Fan and studied under him with determination to master the arts of verse, painting, calligraphy and seal-carving, the four attributes of the literati tradition. Ling’s dedication and perseverance led him to continue his tutelage under Fan for the next thirty years from 1957 to 1987, making him the first and longest disciple of Fan Chang Tien.

Having acquired a strong foundation from Fan’s tutelage, Ling Cher Eng’s works captured the carefree and effortless expressionism of the Shanghai School xieyi style. Ling’s oeuvre spans a wide range of subjects.

Cheong Soo Pieng

[b. 1917-1983]

Cheong Soo Pieng (1917-1983), a Chinese diaspora artist from Fujian, is one of Southeast Asia’s most well-known artists. He was a never-say-die artist who was continuously experimenting with new artistic compositions and materials, resulting in both inventive abstract patterns and compassionate representations of Balinese figures. Along with artists like Chen Wen Hsi, Liu Kang, and Georgette Chen, he was a pioneer of the Nanyang Style.
Cheong used graphic outlines and mellow tones to elevate tropical daily life in Southeast Asia, combining the sensibilities of Chinese ink and Western oil painting. His unusual paintings of doe-eyed feminine figures with elongated limbs and simple outlines reminiscent of wayang kulit puppets were inspired by a trip to Bali in 1952. He explored space and form by digging deeper into sculptures and assemblages, displaying his mastery across mediums while pushing the frontiers of abstract art.

Chen Chong Swee

[b. 1910-1985]

Chen Chong Swee, otherwise known as Chen Khai, was born in 1910, Chenghai County, Guangdong, China. He graduated from the Xinhua Arts Academy in Shanghai and Union High School in Shantou, China, before settling in Singapore in 1934. Known as one of Singapore’s pioneering first-generation artists, Chen was also an influential art educator and writer passionate about the state of arts in Singapore.
Chen spent his early years in Singapore teaching at Tuan Mong High School and Chung Cheng High School before leading the Chinese Painting Department at the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts (NAFA), where he remained for more than 20 years.
Chen was best known for his realist style and application of Chinese ink painting techniques. Combining Chinese and Western pictorial traditions, Chen was one of the first to capture the Southeast Asian landscape and its people in the Chinese ink and brush landscape format

Jung Kwang Sik

[b. 1955]

Internationally recognized for his masterful fusion of painting and sculpture, South Korean artist Jung Kwang Sik graduated in 1992 with a Stage Design major from Carrara Academy, Italy, later receiving his BFA from Hong-lk University in 1996. Utilizing beds of carved and scratched granite, which he then paints, his works suggest sweeping landscapes viewed from an aerial perspective. His exceptional skill of carving, scratching and painting creates a vision of landscapes as one might see them from 30,000 feet, materialized in trails of crustal movements, the swelling and contraction of the earth, and the etched beauty of erosion. The resulting visual field is majestic and unforgettable.

Coplu

[b. 1958]

Born in the Turkish town of Ushak, Coplu brought into the art world his distinctive style of cartoons, filled with warm and sentimental characters that range from silly to profound. Highly recognized and exhibited, the artist has won many competitions and accolades for his artworks and has been published in various media in Turkey, South East Asia and across Europe. He has also established an Open Air Cartoon Exhibition Space and the Cartoon School of Antalya. Part of many prestigious collections, the artist has been exhibited the world over, including France, Italy, the US, Germany and Spain.

Lee Lee-Nam

[b. 1969]

South Korean artist, Lee Lee Nam creates innovative and dynamic aesthetic masterpieces by combining the use of technology with classic representations, using monitors to replace canvases and translating his work into “pure, moving image art”. Born in 1969 at Damyang, Lee graduated with a Ph.D in 2007 from Yongsei University, Seoul, Korea. His creations of post-modern video artwork are as fictitious as dreams overlapping reality and one’s illusions, encompassing both the traditional and modern image. Lee’s artistic displays are found in New York, Beijing, Germany, Washington, and he has held over 200 exhibitions worldwide.

Lee Gil-Rae

[b. 1919]

Lee Gil-Rae graduated from Kyunghee University after studying in the department of art education, later going on to gain his Masters in the discipline of Sculpture. For twenty years, Lee used nature as his muse and crafted sculptures from steel and copper pipes. With rapid deforestation, Lee Gil-Rae’s trees narrate the artificial nature that city dwellers so closely identify with. The man-made and constructed simulation of nature is apparent in all towns and cities. Nature is removed and confined to make room for the ever-expanding population.
Lee Gil-Rae has participated in several exhibitions in Korea, America and Japan and features in numerous permanent collections. He constructs enormous forests of copper, capturing this rapidly depleting resource for eternity.
In his persistent need to create organic forms Lee Gil-Rae takes it one step further in creating man-made nature. His works consist of surreal, leafless forests that one can meander into, with spiralling branches that are unnatural in structure but organic in aesthetic.

Ong Kim Seng

[b. 1945 - 2025]

Ong Kim Seng, born in 1945 in Singapore, is one of the nation’s most celebrated watercolourists, renowned for his ability to capture light, atmosphere and cultural heritage. Growing up in a humble kampong in the Kallang area, Ong was largely self‑taught, honing his skills while working a variety of jobs from graphic design to photography before dedicating himself fully to painting. His travels across Asia — from the streets of Kathmandu to the canals of Venice — infused his works with a global perspective while retaining a deeply Singaporean soul.
Over the decades, Ong’s mastery has earned him six awards from the American Watercolour Society — a rare honour for a non‑American — and Singapore’s Cultural Medallion in 1999. Collectors worldwide prize his evocative depictions of old shophouses, vanishing streetscapes and tranquil landscapes, cementing Ong Kim Seng’s legacy as a cornerstone of Singapore’s art history.

Rujiman

[b. 1975]

Rujiman was born in 1975 and graduated from the School of Fine Arts in Yogyakarta. He currently stays in Indonesia. Known as the ‘Koi Fish painter’, Rujiman’s abstract oil paintings are heavily impasto-ed, which adds great energy to his subject matter. He transfers the movements, color schemes and implications of Koi fish from his memory onto canvas using a pallet knife, and captures a style that spans abstract to semi-abstract to Impressionism. The artist has shown much cultural achievement as a fish painter and is skilled in connecting aesthetics with Asian philosophy. He is highly recognized in Indonesia and is rapidly gaining popularity for his style.

Pie

[b. 1973]

Pie was born in France in 1973, and, growing up in the region of Cannes, discovered his passion for art at an early age. He is an artist who is inspired by the world around him, by society, pop culture, iconic superheroes, luxury brands, political news and much more. With a diverse background as an engineer and entrepreneur, Pie is naturally highly experimental in his artistic exploration. This is reflected in his unique technique, as he mixes mediums and materials such as sketching, painting, aluminum, digital technology and resin to create captivating urban masterpieces that feature vibrant colour palettes and electrifying forms.

The precision and the technicality of his works stemming from his engineering past comes stunningly contrasts the sense of spirited energy and dynamism conveyed by the coloured resins of his dynamic works. To appreciate the nuanced yet contemporary artistic vision of Pie, one must literally dive into his works, which develop inwards like a dive into an abyss.

Yu Nan Cheng

[b. 1956]

Yu Nancheng, born in 1956 in Changzhou, Jiangsu Province, has made significant contributions to the art world over his 40+ year career. Currently based in Shanghai, his works have been exhibited extensively across China and internationally, with collections in the U.S., Germany, Switzerland, France, England, Japan, and various Middle Eastern countries. Yu’s innovative use of palette knife application to create layered textures has transformed Chinese oil painting, blending traditional Chinese and Western techniques to define his distinctive style.

Syaiful A. Rachman

[b. 1974]

Trained at the Institute of Arts in Yogyakarta, Syaiful Rachman is one of the most talented artists to emerge from the contemporary Indonesian art scene. His incredible precision and ability to use mass culture to bring together human objects has not only won him numerous awards but also substantial critical acclaim

Syaiful’s particular fascination with celebrities and prominent figures is derived from the conviction that they are the ‘nodes’ of various things – persona, popularity and even power, all of which are manifested in every human subject.

Qin Feng

[b. 1961]

Qin Feng is an iconic modernist ink painter whose work transcends generations to bind Chinese traditions of ink painting and Western Abstract art. Grounded in traditional Chinese brushwork, his expressive compositions serve as bold and dramatic meditations on time and motion. Born in 1961 in Xinjiang, China, Qin graduated from Shangdong Art Institute in China and has won several art awards from the City of Berlin and the Vermont Art Center. He has exhibited in major galleries and museums like the Goedhuis Contemporary, New York, The Beijing Museum of Contemporary Art, China, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

Richard Orlinski

[b. 1966]

Richard Orlinski has been the best-selling French contemporary artist in the world since 2015. He began his artistic career in 2004, and created his first work, a crocodile in bright red resin, which quickly became an iconic piece of the sculptor’s bestiary. The artist takes his inspiration from pop-culture, everyday objects and the popular. Richard Orlinski quickly developed new sculptures, often animals, all symbols of freedom, power and passion. The result is a series of powerful works, with pop colors and a faceted style that will travel the world.

Phua Cheng Phue

Phua Cheng Phue

[b. 1934-2004]

Phua Cheng Phue graduated from the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts and is proficient in oils, watercolours, Chinese finger-painting, as well as Chinese ink and brush painting. He has received several awards including the National Day Excellence Award in 1976 and the Dr Tan Tsze Chor Award in 1988. Phua’s artworks are collected by corporations and museums.

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